id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699363
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic biota
ALPINE/TUNDRA
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOSPHERE
TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS
ISLANDS
ANIMALS/INVERTEBRATES
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
INSECTS
ARTHROPODS
HEXAPODS
EARTHWORMS
SEGMENTED WORMS (ANNELIDS)
COMMUNITY STRUCTURE
ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS
COMMUNITY DYNAMICS
CLIMATE CHANGE
COLLEMBOLA
HABITAT
LATITUDE
LOCATION
LONGITUDE
MACQUARIE ISLAND
MICROINVERTEBRATES
MITES
RISCC
SITE NAME
SOUTHERN OCEAN
FIELD SURVEYS
GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
spellingShingle biota
ALPINE/TUNDRA
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOSPHERE
TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS
ISLANDS
ANIMALS/INVERTEBRATES
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
INSECTS
ARTHROPODS
HEXAPODS
EARTHWORMS
SEGMENTED WORMS (ANNELIDS)
COMMUNITY STRUCTURE
ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS
COMMUNITY DYNAMICS
CLIMATE CHANGE
COLLEMBOLA
HABITAT
LATITUDE
LOCATION
LONGITUDE
MACQUARIE ISLAND
MICROINVERTEBRATES
MITES
RISCC
SITE NAME
SOUTHERN OCEAN
FIELD SURVEYS
GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
Microinvertebrates Survey on Macquarie Island
topic_facet biota
ALPINE/TUNDRA
EARTH SCIENCE
BIOSPHERE
TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS
ISLANDS
ANIMALS/INVERTEBRATES
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
INSECTS
ARTHROPODS
HEXAPODS
EARTHWORMS
SEGMENTED WORMS (ANNELIDS)
COMMUNITY STRUCTURE
ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS
COMMUNITY DYNAMICS
CLIMATE CHANGE
COLLEMBOLA
HABITAT
LATITUDE
LOCATION
LONGITUDE
MACQUARIE ISLAND
MICROINVERTEBRATES
MITES
RISCC
SITE NAME
SOUTHERN OCEAN
FIELD SURVEYS
GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
description MICROINVERTEBRATE SAMPLING PROTOCOL Macquarie Island 01 October 2001 - 28 February 2002 A.HABITATS SAMPLED 8 habitats representative of the following vegetation types were chosen: 1.Azorella macquariensis - Open cushion areas 2.Acaena (magellanica and minor) herbfield 3.Colobanthus muscoides (coastal cushion plants) 4.Mires - Upland 5.Pleurophyllum hookerii dominated areas 6.Poa foliosa Tall tussock 7.Short grassland (incl. Agrostis magellanica/ Festuca contracta/ Luzula) 8.Stilbocarpa polaris dominated coastal herbfield B.HABITAT LOCALITIES 1.Range within which quadrats for a chosen habitat were located : a) Altitudinal limits- Lowland (coast to +/- 300 - 350m) b) Area- Spread over whole island c) Distance- i) 500m min. distance from the perimeter of the Base/logistic zone Viz. none in the logistic zone. - ii) 100m min. distance from an established hut - iii) 50m min. distance from an established path d) Aspect- East and west coasts 2.Types a) Homogeneous areas b) Least impacted areas (viz. Avoided heavily grazed Rabbit areas) (viz. Avoided Alien dominated areas) (viz. Avoided previously sampled or long term study sites) C.GENERAL SAMPLING STRATEGY FOR EACH HABITAT 1.For each habitat Five 2m x 2m quadrats were located (similar in vegetation structure) and marked 1-5. 2.From each quadrat two random samples were taken with the O'Connor split corer (as per sampling protocol D below). Viz: 10 cores from each habitat. 3.Each sample was retained separately (in it's core-tube placed in a plastic bag) and marked accordingly. Viz: A and B from 1 through to 5 (e.g.: Poa1A-B, Poa2A-B, etc to Poa5A-B). 4.On return from the field samples were immediately stored the in a cool, safe (rodent free) place (lab refrigerator) for processing. 5.Invertebrate extraction followed as per protocol E below. Sample numbers were retained throughout the sampling period, together with sampling date. 6.Each habitat was sampled on an average of once every five - six weeks. D.SAMPLING METHOD 1.Random numbers were obtained using a table of random numbers. 2.Numbers 1-100 are in top left quarter, progressing clockwise in the remaining three quarters for 101-200, 201-300 and 301-400. 3.If the position chosen for the first core had already been cored, the next random number and so on was used. 4.The core sample comprised a 70mm depth from ground level (viz. not including above ground vegetation growth and flowering parts). 5.Care was taken to disturb as little as possible of the vegetation in and around quadrat, as well as approach to site. 6.Sampling in or directly after heavy rain was avoided to prevent poor results (although it never rained hard or long enough for this situation to have occurred). 7.Samples were processed within 4 days (max) after return or safe / cool storage. 8.Before re-using any equipment (corer, cores, plastic bags, collecting jars and mesh cover etc), it was cleaned thoroughly to avoid contamination. E.EXTRACTION AND SORTING MESO-INVERTEBRATES : (These include all collembola and mites and enchytraeid earthworms). 1.In the collecting bottle of each sample placed in the HG extractor, an amount (+/- 2 cms high) of propylene * glycol was poured (*propylene glycol; CH3 CH(OH) CH2 OH = 76.10). 2.Core-samples were separated into litter-like top and about 5- 7 cm of soil. 3.Samples were retained in their respective core-rings, and where above ground vegetation biomass was more than could fit the depth of a ring, this was placed into additional rings. The veg (top)-side was covered with mesh or mutton cloth (approx. 1.5-2mm diam.) and secured with elastic bands (shock cord 3mm diam.). 4.The mesh covered side was placed facing down over the collection bottle in the HG extractor. The HG was left running for the first 2 days at 25 degrees C, and for the following two days (3rd and 4th days) at 30 degrees C. 5.Samples were transferred to 99% or 100% alcohol by draining off the propylene glycol through a 60 micron mesh, picking all the colembola and mites off it with a very fine paint-brush through the view of a good microscope, and placing these into labeled vials. 6.The filtered propylene glycol was re-used a couple of times. 7.Where time allowed, mites and colembola were separated for certain samples. 8.Sample details were noted in pencil on labels provided on the outside of each vial, and printed labels were inserted into each sample vial (see Macca Colembola and Mite labels 2001-02.doc). F.DATA ACQUISITION AND ARCHIVAL 1.Field data were captured in pencil using one A6 hard-cover note-book. 2.Data was transferred to spreadsheet and document and stored on CD-R discs with a back-up copy. This work was completed as part of the RiSCC project (Regional Sensitivity to Climate Change). The fields in this dataset are: Site name Habitat Location Latitude Longitude
author2 BERGSTROM, DANA M. (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
BERGSTROM, DANA M. (processor)
CHOWN, STEVEN (processor)
Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
format Dataset
title Microinvertebrates Survey on Macquarie Island
title_short Microinvertebrates Survey on Macquarie Island
title_full Microinvertebrates Survey on Macquarie Island
title_fullStr Microinvertebrates Survey on Macquarie Island
title_full_unstemmed Microinvertebrates Survey on Macquarie Island
title_sort microinvertebrates survey on macquarie island
publisher Australian Antarctic Data Centre
url https://researchdata.ands.org.au/microinvertebrates-survey-macquarie-island/699363
https://doi.org/10.4225/15/54B319E88DE06
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1015_MI_Inverts
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_coverage Spatial: northlimit=-54.0; southlimit=-54.0; westlimit=158.0; eastLimit=159.0; projection=WGS84
Temporal: From 2001-10-01 to 2002-03-31
long_lat ENVELOPE(-115.753,-115.753,60.834,60.834)
ENVELOPE(-65.652,-65.652,-66.008,-66.008)
ENVELOPE(-58.383,-58.383,-62.067,-62.067)
ENVELOPE(158.0,159.0,-54.0,-54.0)
geographic Southern Ocean
Island C
Mutton
O'Connor
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
Island C
Mutton
O'Connor
genre Macquarie Island
Southern Ocean
Tundra
Mite
genre_facet Macquarie Island
Southern Ocean
Tundra
Mite
op_source Australian Antarctic Data Centre
op_relation https://researchdata.ands.org.au/microinvertebrates-survey-macquarie-island/699363
eb074940-ccf8-4c97-9dba-03149f6a2761
doi:10.4225/15/54B319E88DE06
ASAC_1015_MI_Inverts
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1015_MI_Inverts
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4225/15/54B319E88DE06
_version_ 1766066356157939712
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::699363 2023-05-15T17:09:58+02:00 Microinvertebrates Survey on Macquarie Island BERGSTROM, DANA M. (hasPrincipalInvestigator) BERGSTROM, DANA M. (processor) CHOWN, STEVEN (processor) Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher) Spatial: northlimit=-54.0; southlimit=-54.0; westlimit=158.0; eastLimit=159.0; projection=WGS84 Temporal: From 2001-10-01 to 2002-03-31 https://researchdata.ands.org.au/microinvertebrates-survey-macquarie-island/699363 https://doi.org/10.4225/15/54B319E88DE06 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1015_MI_Inverts http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 unknown Australian Antarctic Data Centre https://researchdata.ands.org.au/microinvertebrates-survey-macquarie-island/699363 eb074940-ccf8-4c97-9dba-03149f6a2761 doi:10.4225/15/54B319E88DE06 ASAC_1015_MI_Inverts https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_1015_MI_Inverts http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 Australian Antarctic Data Centre biota ALPINE/TUNDRA EARTH SCIENCE BIOSPHERE TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS ISLANDS ANIMALS/INVERTEBRATES BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION INSECTS ARTHROPODS HEXAPODS EARTHWORMS SEGMENTED WORMS (ANNELIDS) COMMUNITY STRUCTURE ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS COMMUNITY DYNAMICS CLIMATE CHANGE COLLEMBOLA HABITAT LATITUDE LOCATION LONGITUDE MACQUARIE ISLAND MICROINVERTEBRATES MITES RISCC SITE NAME SOUTHERN OCEAN FIELD SURVEYS GROUND-BASED OBSERVATIONS OCEAN &gt SOUTHERN OCEAN &gt GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt POLAR dataset ftands https://doi.org/10.4225/15/54B319E88DE06 2020-01-05T21:16:10Z MICROINVERTEBRATE SAMPLING PROTOCOL Macquarie Island 01 October 2001 - 28 February 2002 A.HABITATS SAMPLED 8 habitats representative of the following vegetation types were chosen: 1.Azorella macquariensis - Open cushion areas 2.Acaena (magellanica and minor) herbfield 3.Colobanthus muscoides (coastal cushion plants) 4.Mires - Upland 5.Pleurophyllum hookerii dominated areas 6.Poa foliosa Tall tussock 7.Short grassland (incl. Agrostis magellanica/ Festuca contracta/ Luzula) 8.Stilbocarpa polaris dominated coastal herbfield B.HABITAT LOCALITIES 1.Range within which quadrats for a chosen habitat were located : a) Altitudinal limits- Lowland (coast to +/- 300 - 350m) b) Area- Spread over whole island c) Distance- i) 500m min. distance from the perimeter of the Base/logistic zone Viz. none in the logistic zone. - ii) 100m min. distance from an established hut - iii) 50m min. distance from an established path d) Aspect- East and west coasts 2.Types a) Homogeneous areas b) Least impacted areas (viz. Avoided heavily grazed Rabbit areas) (viz. Avoided Alien dominated areas) (viz. Avoided previously sampled or long term study sites) C.GENERAL SAMPLING STRATEGY FOR EACH HABITAT 1.For each habitat Five 2m x 2m quadrats were located (similar in vegetation structure) and marked 1-5. 2.From each quadrat two random samples were taken with the O'Connor split corer (as per sampling protocol D below). Viz: 10 cores from each habitat. 3.Each sample was retained separately (in it's core-tube placed in a plastic bag) and marked accordingly. Viz: A and B from 1 through to 5 (e.g.: Poa1A-B, Poa2A-B, etc to Poa5A-B). 4.On return from the field samples were immediately stored the in a cool, safe (rodent free) place (lab refrigerator) for processing. 5.Invertebrate extraction followed as per protocol E below. Sample numbers were retained throughout the sampling period, together with sampling date. 6.Each habitat was sampled on an average of once every five - six weeks. D.SAMPLING METHOD 1.Random numbers were obtained using a table of random numbers. 2.Numbers 1-100 are in top left quarter, progressing clockwise in the remaining three quarters for 101-200, 201-300 and 301-400. 3.If the position chosen for the first core had already been cored, the next random number and so on was used. 4.The core sample comprised a 70mm depth from ground level (viz. not including above ground vegetation growth and flowering parts). 5.Care was taken to disturb as little as possible of the vegetation in and around quadrat, as well as approach to site. 6.Sampling in or directly after heavy rain was avoided to prevent poor results (although it never rained hard or long enough for this situation to have occurred). 7.Samples were processed within 4 days (max) after return or safe / cool storage. 8.Before re-using any equipment (corer, cores, plastic bags, collecting jars and mesh cover etc), it was cleaned thoroughly to avoid contamination. E.EXTRACTION AND SORTING MESO-INVERTEBRATES : (These include all collembola and mites and enchytraeid earthworms). 1.In the collecting bottle of each sample placed in the HG extractor, an amount (+/- 2 cms high) of propylene * glycol was poured (*propylene glycol; CH3 CH(OH) CH2 OH = 76.10). 2.Core-samples were separated into litter-like top and about 5- 7 cm of soil. 3.Samples were retained in their respective core-rings, and where above ground vegetation biomass was more than could fit the depth of a ring, this was placed into additional rings. The veg (top)-side was covered with mesh or mutton cloth (approx. 1.5-2mm diam.) and secured with elastic bands (shock cord 3mm diam.). 4.The mesh covered side was placed facing down over the collection bottle in the HG extractor. The HG was left running for the first 2 days at 25 degrees C, and for the following two days (3rd and 4th days) at 30 degrees C. 5.Samples were transferred to 99% or 100% alcohol by draining off the propylene glycol through a 60 micron mesh, picking all the colembola and mites off it with a very fine paint-brush through the view of a good microscope, and placing these into labeled vials. 6.The filtered propylene glycol was re-used a couple of times. 7.Where time allowed, mites and colembola were separated for certain samples. 8.Sample details were noted in pencil on labels provided on the outside of each vial, and printed labels were inserted into each sample vial (see Macca Colembola and Mite labels 2001-02.doc). F.DATA ACQUISITION AND ARCHIVAL 1.Field data were captured in pencil using one A6 hard-cover note-book. 2.Data was transferred to spreadsheet and document and stored on CD-R discs with a back-up copy. This work was completed as part of the RiSCC project (Regional Sensitivity to Climate Change). The fields in this dataset are: Site name Habitat Location Latitude Longitude Dataset Macquarie Island Southern Ocean Tundra Mite Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Southern Ocean Island C ENVELOPE(-115.753,-115.753,60.834,60.834) Mutton ENVELOPE(-65.652,-65.652,-66.008,-66.008) O'Connor ENVELOPE(-58.383,-58.383,-62.067,-62.067) ENVELOPE(158.0,159.0,-54.0,-54.0)