Phytoplankton and hydrological succession in Omega and Taynaya Bays, eastern Antarctica

Metadata record for data from ASAC Project 2146\nSee the link below for public details on this project.\n\nFrom the abstracts of the referenced papers:\n\nEarly season phytoplankton communities in both Omega and Taynaya Bays are characterised by diatoms sedimenting out of the overlying sea ice. Init...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Australian Antarctic Division (isOwnedBy)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: data.gov.au
Subjects:
ABS
AMD
Online Access:https://researchdata.edu.au/phytoplankton-hydrological-succession-eastern-antarctica/1941846
http://data.gov.au/dataset/74d4c061-1d37-47b4-8161-ebe74fb7ca48
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Summary:Metadata record for data from ASAC Project 2146\nSee the link below for public details on this project.\n\nFrom the abstracts of the referenced papers:\n\nEarly season phytoplankton communities in both Omega and Taynaya Bays are characterised by diatoms sedimenting out of the overlying sea ice. Initial nitrate, phosphate and silicate levels are high and the bay waters are covered with ice and well mixed. In Taynaya Bay the ice cover is retained throughout the season while Omega Bay is free for 6-8 weeks. After ice break out in Omega Bay, the phytoplankton community changes from one dominated by diatoms to one dominated by the phtyoflagellates, Pyramimonas spp., Cryptomonas sp. and Gymnodinium sp. In Taynaya Bay the ice remained and even though phtyoflagellates became more common, diatoms still dominated. These differences in community composition result from differences in light climate, extent of stratification and nutrient levels. \n\nSediment cores from Abel and Platcha Bays, in the Vestfold Hills, east Antarctica, contain evidence for a local late Holocene increase in fast ice extent and a possible ice cap retreat at approximately 1750 yr BP, a similar time to the Chelnock Glaciation. Prior to this time both bays experienced periods of isolation that lead to changes in their diatom flora, C:N ratio, percentage of biogenic silica and total organic carbon. Three new diatom indices are proposed; the fast ice index, based on the proportion of benthic taxa and the snow index, based on the proportion of Berkelaya adeliense and Thalassiosira australis. These indices show strong relationships with the percentage of biogenic silica, total organic carbon and percentage sand. A weak relationship exists between the fast ice index and delta 13 C and no relationship with the C:N ratio.\n\nThe fields in these datasets are:\n\nDate\nJulian Day\nSample\nVolume filtered (L)\nAcetone Volume (ml)\nAbs\nChlorophyll\nPhytoplankton GET DATA - Download point for the data - excel spreadsheets