Data from two Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) 24-hour feeding experiments under ambient temperature and pCO2, ambient temperature and elevated pCO2, and elevated temperature and pCO2.

<p>Data from two Antarctic krill (<em>Euphausia superba</em>) 24-hour feeding experiments under ambient temperature and pCO2, ambient temperature and elevated pCO2, and elevated temperature and pCO2.</p> <p>We conducted perturbation experiments to determine potential ch...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Grace Saba, Brad Seibel
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO) 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:c8c74a3f69f27b920e5d65efd24266ce40b2f845de375c32e720c552632eb40e
Description
Summary:<p>Data from two Antarctic krill (<em>Euphausia superba</em>) 24-hour feeding experiments under ambient temperature and pCO2, ambient temperature and elevated pCO2, and elevated temperature and pCO2.</p> <p>We conducted perturbation experiments to determine potential changes in feeding rates of Euphausia superba (32-41 mm) due to decreased pH and elevated temperature. Target pH was reached in the experiments via CO2 bubbling of seawater flowing through gas equilibration columns. The two feeding experiments differed in acclimation time.&nbsp; Krill in experiment 1 (Exp 1) and experiment 2 (Exp 2) were acclimated to treatment conditions for 48 hours and 21 days, respectively.</p>