id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::686438
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic oceans
NUTRIENTS
EARTH SCIENCE
OCEAN CHEMISTRY
BACTERIA/ARCHAEA
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
CYANOBACTERIA (BLUE-GREEN ALGAE)
MICROALGAE
PLANTS
Iron
Algal Growth
Bacterial Growth
SAZ
R/V AA &gt
R/V Aurora Australis
SHIPS
AMD/AU
CEOS
AMD
ACE/CRC
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
spellingShingle oceans
NUTRIENTS
EARTH SCIENCE
OCEAN CHEMISTRY
BACTERIA/ARCHAEA
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
CYANOBACTERIA (BLUE-GREEN ALGAE)
MICROALGAE
PLANTS
Iron
Algal Growth
Bacterial Growth
SAZ
R/V AA &gt
R/V Aurora Australis
SHIPS
AMD/AU
CEOS
AMD
ACE/CRC
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
Subantarctic zone oceanography - SAZ Project 1997-1998 - Iron Related Data
topic_facet oceans
NUTRIENTS
EARTH SCIENCE
OCEAN CHEMISTRY
BACTERIA/ARCHAEA
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
CYANOBACTERIA (BLUE-GREEN ALGAE)
MICROALGAE
PLANTS
Iron
Algal Growth
Bacterial Growth
SAZ
R/V AA &gt
R/V Aurora Australis
SHIPS
AMD/AU
CEOS
AMD
ACE/CRC
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
description See the referenced papers for more information. Oceanographic processes in the subantarctic region contribute crucially to the physical and biogeochemical aspects of the global climate system. To explore and quantify these contributions, the Antarctic Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) organised the SAZ Project, a multidisciplinary, multiship investigation carried out south of Australia in the austral summer of 1997-1998. Taken from the abstracts of the referenced papers: In March 1998 we measured iron in the upper water column and conducted iron- and nutrient-enrichment bottle-incubation experiments in the open-ocean Subantarctic region southwest of Tasmania, Australia. In the Subtropical Convergence Zone (~42 degrees S, 142 degrees E), silicic acid concentrations were low (less than 1.5 micro-M) in the upper water column, whereas pronounced vertical gradients in dissolved iron concentration (0.12-0.84 nM) were observed, presumably reflecting the interleaving of Subtropical and Subantarctic waters, and mineral aerosol input. Results of a bottle-incubation experiment performed at this location indicate that phytoplankton growth rates were limited by iron deficiency within the iron-poor layer of the euphotic zone. In the Subantarctic water mass (-46.8 degrees S, 142 degrees E), low concentrations of dissolved iron (0.05-0.11 nM) and silicic acid (less than 1 micro-M) were measured throughout the upper water column, and our experimental results indicate that algal growth was limited by iron deficiency. These observations suggest that availability of dissolved iron is a primary factor limiting phytoplankton growth over much of the Subantarctic Southern Ocean in the late summer and autumn. The importance of resource limitation in controlling bacterial growth in the high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll (HNLC) region of the Southern Ocean was experimentally determined during February and March 1998. Organic- and inorganic-nutrient enrichment experiments were performed between 42 degrees S and 55 degrees S along 141 degrees E. Bacterial abundance, mean cell volume, and [3H]thymidine and [3H]leucine incorporation were measured during 4- to 5-day incubations. Bacterial biomass, production, and rates of growth all responded to organic enrichments in three of the four experiments. These results indicate that bacterial growth was constrained primarily by the availability of dissolved organic matter. Bacterial growth in the subtropical front, subantarctic zone, and subantarctic front responded most favourably to additions of dissolved free amino acids or glucose plus ammonium. Bacterial growth in these regions may be limited by input of both organic matter and reduced nitrogen. Unlike similar experimental results in other HNLC regions (subarctic and equatorial Pacific), growth stimulation of bacteria in the Southern Ocean resulted in significant biomass accumulation, apparently by stimulating bacterial growth in excess of removal processes. Bacterial growth was relatively unchanged by additions of iron alone; however, additions of glucose plus iron resulted in substantial increases in rates of bacterial growth and biomass accumulation. These results imply that bacterial growth efficiency and nitrogen utilisation may be partly constrained by iron availability in the HNLC Southern Ocean. The download file also contains three excel spreadsheets of iron data from the project. The file Sedwick_A9706_Fe_data contains water-column dissolved Fe and total-dissolvable Fe data from cruise A9706, which is presented in Sedwick et al. (1999) and Sedwick et al. (2008). The files Sedwick_A9706_ProcessStn1_Exp_data and Sedwick_A9706_ProcessStn2_Exp_data present data from shipboard experiments conducted during cruise A9706 at Process Stations 1 and 2, respectively, as reported in Sedwick et al. (1999).
author2 AADC (originator)
AU/AADC > Australian Antarctic Data Centre, Australia (resourceProvider)
format Dataset
title Subantarctic zone oceanography - SAZ Project 1997-1998 - Iron Related Data
title_short Subantarctic zone oceanography - SAZ Project 1997-1998 - Iron Related Data
title_full Subantarctic zone oceanography - SAZ Project 1997-1998 - Iron Related Data
title_fullStr Subantarctic zone oceanography - SAZ Project 1997-1998 - Iron Related Data
title_full_unstemmed Subantarctic zone oceanography - SAZ Project 1997-1998 - Iron Related Data
title_sort subantarctic zone oceanography - saz project 1997-1998 - iron related data
publisher Australian Ocean Data Network
url https://researchdata.ands.org.au/subantarctic-zone-oceanography-iron-related/686438
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2256_Iron
http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/portal/download_file.cfm?file_id=3632
https://secure3.aad.gov.au/proms/public/projects/report_project_public.cfm?project_no=2256
http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/portal/download_file.cfm?file_id=3409
http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/metadata/citation.cfm?entry_id=ASAC_2256_Iron
op_coverage Spatial: northlimit=-42.0; southlimit=-55.0; westlimit=141.5; eastLimit=141.5
Temporal: From 1997-09-01 to 1998-03-31
long_lat ENVELOPE(141.5,141.5,-42.0,-55.0)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Austral
Pacific
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Austral
Pacific
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
aurora australis
Southern Ocean
Subarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
aurora australis
Southern Ocean
Subarctic
op_source https://data.aad.gov.au
op_relation https://researchdata.ands.org.au/subantarctic-zone-oceanography-iron-related/686438
2fd2da10-ab3c-4595-b009-a18d74d68179
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2256_Iron
http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/portal/download_file.cfm?file_id=3632
https://secure3.aad.gov.au/proms/public/projects/report_project_public.cfm?project_no=2256
http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/portal/download_file.cfm?file_id=3409
http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/metadata/citation.cfm?entry_id=ASAC_2256_Iron
_version_ 1766256134382944256
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::686438 2023-05-15T13:52:00+02:00 Subantarctic zone oceanography - SAZ Project 1997-1998 - Iron Related Data AADC (originator) AU/AADC > Australian Antarctic Data Centre, Australia (resourceProvider) Spatial: northlimit=-42.0; southlimit=-55.0; westlimit=141.5; eastLimit=141.5 Temporal: From 1997-09-01 to 1998-03-31 https://researchdata.ands.org.au/subantarctic-zone-oceanography-iron-related/686438 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2256_Iron http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/portal/download_file.cfm?file_id=3632 https://secure3.aad.gov.au/proms/public/projects/report_project_public.cfm?project_no=2256 http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/portal/download_file.cfm?file_id=3409 http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/metadata/citation.cfm?entry_id=ASAC_2256_Iron unknown Australian Ocean Data Network https://researchdata.ands.org.au/subantarctic-zone-oceanography-iron-related/686438 2fd2da10-ab3c-4595-b009-a18d74d68179 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2256_Iron http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/portal/download_file.cfm?file_id=3632 https://secure3.aad.gov.au/proms/public/projects/report_project_public.cfm?project_no=2256 http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/portal/download_file.cfm?file_id=3409 http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/metadata/citation.cfm?entry_id=ASAC_2256_Iron https://data.aad.gov.au oceans NUTRIENTS EARTH SCIENCE OCEAN CHEMISTRY BACTERIA/ARCHAEA BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION CYANOBACTERIA (BLUE-GREEN ALGAE) MICROALGAE PLANTS Iron Algal Growth Bacterial Growth SAZ R/V AA &gt R/V Aurora Australis SHIPS AMD/AU CEOS AMD ACE/CRC OCEAN &gt SOUTHERN OCEAN GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt POLAR dataset ftands 2020-02-17T23:22:10Z See the referenced papers for more information. Oceanographic processes in the subantarctic region contribute crucially to the physical and biogeochemical aspects of the global climate system. To explore and quantify these contributions, the Antarctic Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) organised the SAZ Project, a multidisciplinary, multiship investigation carried out south of Australia in the austral summer of 1997-1998. Taken from the abstracts of the referenced papers: In March 1998 we measured iron in the upper water column and conducted iron- and nutrient-enrichment bottle-incubation experiments in the open-ocean Subantarctic region southwest of Tasmania, Australia. In the Subtropical Convergence Zone (~42 degrees S, 142 degrees E), silicic acid concentrations were low (less than 1.5 micro-M) in the upper water column, whereas pronounced vertical gradients in dissolved iron concentration (0.12-0.84 nM) were observed, presumably reflecting the interleaving of Subtropical and Subantarctic waters, and mineral aerosol input. Results of a bottle-incubation experiment performed at this location indicate that phytoplankton growth rates were limited by iron deficiency within the iron-poor layer of the euphotic zone. In the Subantarctic water mass (-46.8 degrees S, 142 degrees E), low concentrations of dissolved iron (0.05-0.11 nM) and silicic acid (less than 1 micro-M) were measured throughout the upper water column, and our experimental results indicate that algal growth was limited by iron deficiency. These observations suggest that availability of dissolved iron is a primary factor limiting phytoplankton growth over much of the Subantarctic Southern Ocean in the late summer and autumn. The importance of resource limitation in controlling bacterial growth in the high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll (HNLC) region of the Southern Ocean was experimentally determined during February and March 1998. Organic- and inorganic-nutrient enrichment experiments were performed between 42 degrees S and 55 degrees S along 141 degrees E. Bacterial abundance, mean cell volume, and [3H]thymidine and [3H]leucine incorporation were measured during 4- to 5-day incubations. Bacterial biomass, production, and rates of growth all responded to organic enrichments in three of the four experiments. These results indicate that bacterial growth was constrained primarily by the availability of dissolved organic matter. Bacterial growth in the subtropical front, subantarctic zone, and subantarctic front responded most favourably to additions of dissolved free amino acids or glucose plus ammonium. Bacterial growth in these regions may be limited by input of both organic matter and reduced nitrogen. Unlike similar experimental results in other HNLC regions (subarctic and equatorial Pacific), growth stimulation of bacteria in the Southern Ocean resulted in significant biomass accumulation, apparently by stimulating bacterial growth in excess of removal processes. Bacterial growth was relatively unchanged by additions of iron alone; however, additions of glucose plus iron resulted in substantial increases in rates of bacterial growth and biomass accumulation. These results imply that bacterial growth efficiency and nitrogen utilisation may be partly constrained by iron availability in the HNLC Southern Ocean. The download file also contains three excel spreadsheets of iron data from the project. The file Sedwick_A9706_Fe_data contains water-column dissolved Fe and total-dissolvable Fe data from cruise A9706, which is presented in Sedwick et al. (1999) and Sedwick et al. (2008). The files Sedwick_A9706_ProcessStn1_Exp_data and Sedwick_A9706_ProcessStn2_Exp_data present data from shipboard experiments conducted during cruise A9706 at Process Stations 1 and 2, respectively, as reported in Sedwick et al. (1999). Dataset Antarc* Antarctic aurora australis Southern Ocean Subarctic Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic Austral Pacific ENVELOPE(141.5,141.5,-42.0,-55.0)