Cross-generational effects of climate change on a photosynthetic sponge

Maintenance and Update Frequency: asNeeded Statement: A single person scored the level of bleaching in sponge recruits to eliminate observer bias.\n Credit Andersen M. AIMS and AIMS@JCU Credit Luter LM. Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) and Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand...

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Other Authors: AIMS Data Centre (distributor), AIMS Data Centre (pointOfContact), Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) (hasAssociationWith), Data Manager, AIMS Data Centre (hasAssociationWith), Webster, N (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Australian Ocean Data Network
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Online Access:https://researchdata.edu.au/cross-generational-effects-photosynthetic-sponge/1883343
id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::1883343
record_format openpolar
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::1883343 2023-12-24T10:23:53+01:00 Cross-generational effects of climate change on a photosynthetic sponge AIMS Data Centre (distributor) AIMS Data Centre (pointOfContact) Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) (hasAssociationWith) Data Manager, AIMS Data Centre (hasAssociationWith) Webster, N (hasPrincipalInvestigator) Spatial: westlimit=147.05642700126447; southlimit=-19.26563966655997; eastlimit=147.05642700126447; northlimit=-19.26563966655997 https://researchdata.edu.au/cross-generational-effects-photosynthetic-sponge/1883343 unknown Australian Ocean Data Network https://researchdata.edu.au/cross-generational-effects-photosynthetic-sponge/1883343 e700cbef-6722-4f4c-ac8b-46b8949f2507 Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) oceans dataset ftands 2023-11-27T23:33:51Z Maintenance and Update Frequency: asNeeded Statement: A single person scored the level of bleaching in sponge recruits to eliminate observer bias.\n Credit Andersen M. AIMS and AIMS@JCU Credit Luter LM. Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) and Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand Credit Laffy P. AIMS Credit Uthicke S. AIMS Credit Versteegn A. AIMS and AIMS@JCU Credit Bell JJ. Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand Credit Webster NS. AIMS and University of Queensland (QU) Unlike calcifying invertebrates, a number of sponges have demonstrated tolerance to climate scenarios predicted for the future; however, the mechanisms that enable them to cope with ocean warming and ocean acidification are limited. In this project, we examined whether microbiome-mediated cross-generational acclimatization could enable a photosynthetic sponge to survive under predicted climate scenarios. This associated dataset provides information on the mortality and bleaching observed in juvenile sponge recruits that were transplanted to climate scenarios predicted for 2050 and 2100. A visual bleaching assessment was conducted at the end of the 5-week experiment, with mortality captured throughout. Data was entered in excel and visualized using graphs in R.\n \n Dataset Ocean acidification Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) New Zealand Queensland
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic oceans
spellingShingle oceans
Cross-generational effects of climate change on a photosynthetic sponge
topic_facet oceans
description Maintenance and Update Frequency: asNeeded Statement: A single person scored the level of bleaching in sponge recruits to eliminate observer bias.\n Credit Andersen M. AIMS and AIMS@JCU Credit Luter LM. Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) and Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand Credit Laffy P. AIMS Credit Uthicke S. AIMS Credit Versteegn A. AIMS and AIMS@JCU Credit Bell JJ. Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand Credit Webster NS. AIMS and University of Queensland (QU) Unlike calcifying invertebrates, a number of sponges have demonstrated tolerance to climate scenarios predicted for the future; however, the mechanisms that enable them to cope with ocean warming and ocean acidification are limited. In this project, we examined whether microbiome-mediated cross-generational acclimatization could enable a photosynthetic sponge to survive under predicted climate scenarios. This associated dataset provides information on the mortality and bleaching observed in juvenile sponge recruits that were transplanted to climate scenarios predicted for 2050 and 2100. A visual bleaching assessment was conducted at the end of the 5-week experiment, with mortality captured throughout. Data was entered in excel and visualized using graphs in R.\n \n
author2 AIMS Data Centre (distributor)
AIMS Data Centre (pointOfContact)
Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) (hasAssociationWith)
Data Manager, AIMS Data Centre (hasAssociationWith)
Webster, N (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
format Dataset
title Cross-generational effects of climate change on a photosynthetic sponge
title_short Cross-generational effects of climate change on a photosynthetic sponge
title_full Cross-generational effects of climate change on a photosynthetic sponge
title_fullStr Cross-generational effects of climate change on a photosynthetic sponge
title_full_unstemmed Cross-generational effects of climate change on a photosynthetic sponge
title_sort cross-generational effects of climate change on a photosynthetic sponge
publisher Australian Ocean Data Network
url https://researchdata.edu.au/cross-generational-effects-photosynthetic-sponge/1883343
op_coverage Spatial: westlimit=147.05642700126447; southlimit=-19.26563966655997; eastlimit=147.05642700126447; northlimit=-19.26563966655997
geographic New Zealand
Queensland
geographic_facet New Zealand
Queensland
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS)
op_relation https://researchdata.edu.au/cross-generational-effects-photosynthetic-sponge/1883343
e700cbef-6722-4f4c-ac8b-46b8949f2507
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