id ftands:oai:ands.org.au::700199
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS)
op_collection_id ftands
language unknown
topic biota
oceans
ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION
EARTH SCIENCE
ATMOSPHERE
ATMOSPHERIC RADIATION
CHLOROPHYLL
BIOSPHERE
VEGETATION
PROTISTS
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
PHYTOPLANKTON
AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS
PLANKTON
CAROTENOIDS
CHEMTAX
CHLOROPHYLL A
CLIMATE CHANGE
CTD
DATE
DEPTH
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
TEMPERATURE
UV
UV-B
SHIPS
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
spellingShingle biota
oceans
ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION
EARTH SCIENCE
ATMOSPHERE
ATMOSPHERIC RADIATION
CHLOROPHYLL
BIOSPHERE
VEGETATION
PROTISTS
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
PHYTOPLANKTON
AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS
PLANKTON
CAROTENOIDS
CHEMTAX
CHLOROPHYLL A
CLIMATE CHANGE
CTD
DATE
DEPTH
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
TEMPERATURE
UV
UV-B
SHIPS
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
The role of antarctic marine protists in trophodynamics and global change and the impact of UV-B on these organisms - ASAC_40
topic_facet biota
oceans
ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION
EARTH SCIENCE
ATMOSPHERE
ATMOSPHERIC RADIATION
CHLOROPHYLL
BIOSPHERE
VEGETATION
PROTISTS
BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION
PHYTOPLANKTON
AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS
PLANKTON
CAROTENOIDS
CHEMTAX
CHLOROPHYLL A
CLIMATE CHANGE
CTD
DATE
DEPTH
LATITUDE
LONGITUDE
TEMPERATURE
UV
UV-B
SHIPS
OCEAN &gt
SOUTHERN OCEAN
CONTINENT &gt
ANTARCTICA
GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt
POLAR
description This is a parent metadata record for work carried out as part of ASAC/AAS project 40. See the child metadata records for further information. More than 95% of the biomass in the Southern Ocean is microscopic - single celled plants, animals, bacteria and viruses. We are studying the factors that control their distribution and abundance - oceanographic and seasonal conditions, their physiology, and grazing - in order to model their vital roles as food for other organisms and their influence in moderating global climate change through absorption of CO2 and production of DMS. We are also addressing the changes expected in microbial communities through effects of climate change - global warming, sea ice retreat, ocean acidification and enhanced ultraviolet radiation. This project aims to determine the role of microorganisms in the Southern Ocean. The major objectives are to: * Identify and quantify key protistan components of the Southern Ocean ecosystem and study their autoecology. * Identify environmental and ecological processes that control abundance of key microbial components. * Determine interactions between key microbial components to quantify major pathways of carbon flow. * Determine the activity and viability of bacterioplankton and protists in the Southern Ocean. * Distinguish different microbial communities by identifying key taxa and associations so that processes such as primary production, respiration, grazing and particle flux can be readily parameterised in ecological models. * Determine the effect of elevated CO2 concentrations on microbial populations and processes. Taken from the 2008-2009 Progress Report: Progress against objectives: 1. Ongoing sampling from Astrolabe has continued, with 3 return voyages being sampled for phytoplankton species, chlorophyll a and other pigments, coccolithophorid counts and DNA profiles, in conjunction with measurements of CO2, ocean structure, fluorescence and ocean colour by CSIRO / CRC colleagues. 2. Three sets of minicosm experiments were conducted at Davis station with 7 staff spending 4.5 - 5.5 months on site. These experiments consistently found that acidification caused blooms of nanoplanktonic diatoms and increased bacterial activity, apparently by inhibition of microheterotroph grazers, at the expense of larger cells that are more readily ingested by grazers such as krill. We showed for the first time in Antarctic waters that pCO2 affects the structure and function Antarctic microbial communities in a way that may reduce food availability to large grazers. Over 100 cultures of "winners and losers" from such experiments were isolated and returned to Australia. These will form the basis for further physiological experiments including molecular assays. 3. Submission and acceptance of 8 papers from the BROKE-West cruise (5 as senior author). These showed the interactions between bottom-up (micronutient) top-down (grazing) control in structuring microbial populations in the marginal ice zone. Five biogeographic zones were identified on the basis of species composition, and the productivity was measured for each zone. Microzooplankton grazing experiments found that grazing within that microbial loop consumed a significant proportion of new productivity. In some areas later in the season, all productivity was consumed by microheterotrophs, rather than metazoans such as krill. A time sequence was identified for seeding and development of components of ice edge blooms, subsequent grazing and decline and a mechanism postulated for export of micronutrients (e.g. iron) by grazing and sedimentation that prevents subsequent development of surface water blooms and constrains populations to a deep chlorophyll maximum below the level of a nutricline. 4. Detailed analysis of greater than 30 strains of keystone species Emiliania huxleyi of two morphotypes in conjunction with Clara Hoppe (Masters student, Alfred Wegener Institute) and Suellen Cook (PhD student, University of Tasmania) showed consistent differences between strains in terms of pigmentation, responses to light and genetics. The two morphotypes appear to be adapted to different mixing regimes north and south of the Polar Front; the southern form may represent a new species. For a full list of references associated with this project, see the project link at the provided URL.
author2 WRIGHT, SIMON (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
WRIGHT, SIMON (processor)
DAVIDSON, ANDREW TIMOTHY (hasPrincipalInvestigator)
DAVIDSON, ANDREW TIMOTHY (processor)
Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher)
format Dataset
title The role of antarctic marine protists in trophodynamics and global change and the impact of UV-B on these organisms - ASAC_40
title_short The role of antarctic marine protists in trophodynamics and global change and the impact of UV-B on these organisms - ASAC_40
title_full The role of antarctic marine protists in trophodynamics and global change and the impact of UV-B on these organisms - ASAC_40
title_fullStr The role of antarctic marine protists in trophodynamics and global change and the impact of UV-B on these organisms - ASAC_40
title_full_unstemmed The role of antarctic marine protists in trophodynamics and global change and the impact of UV-B on these organisms - ASAC_40
title_sort role of antarctic marine protists in trophodynamics and global change and the impact of uv-b on these organisms - asac_40
publisher Australian Antarctic Data Centre
url https://researchdata.ands.org.au/role-antarctic-marine-organisms-asac40/700199
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_40
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
op_coverage Spatial: northlimit=-43.0; southlimit=-70.0; westlimit=60.0; eastLimit=180.0; projection=WGS84
Temporal: From 1980-01-01 to 2013-04-01
long_lat ENVELOPE(140.000,140.000,-66.733,-66.733)
ENVELOPE(77.968,77.968,-68.576,-68.576)
ENVELOPE(77.968,77.968,-68.576,-68.576)
ENVELOPE(60.0,180.0,-43.0,-70.0)
geographic Antarctic
Astrolabe
Davis Station
Davis-Station
Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Antarctic
Astrolabe
Davis Station
Davis-Station
Southern Ocean
genre Alfred Wegener Institute
Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ocean acidification
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Alfred Wegener Institute
Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ocean acidification
Sea ice
Southern Ocean
op_source Australian Antarctic Data Centre
op_relation https://researchdata.ands.org.au/role-antarctic-marine-organisms-asac40/700199
8d027a22-d9a2-4c3a-be6a-465b6daec703
ASAC_40
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_40
http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536
_version_ 1766271953779294208
spelling ftands:oai:ands.org.au::700199 2023-05-15T13:15:57+02:00 The role of antarctic marine protists in trophodynamics and global change and the impact of UV-B on these organisms - ASAC_40 WRIGHT, SIMON (hasPrincipalInvestigator) WRIGHT, SIMON (processor) DAVIDSON, ANDREW TIMOTHY (hasPrincipalInvestigator) DAVIDSON, ANDREW TIMOTHY (processor) Australian Antarctic Data Centre (publisher) Spatial: northlimit=-43.0; southlimit=-70.0; westlimit=60.0; eastLimit=180.0; projection=WGS84 Temporal: From 1980-01-01 to 2013-04-01 https://researchdata.ands.org.au/role-antarctic-marine-organisms-asac40/700199 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_40 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 unknown Australian Antarctic Data Centre https://researchdata.ands.org.au/role-antarctic-marine-organisms-asac40/700199 8d027a22-d9a2-4c3a-be6a-465b6daec703 ASAC_40 https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_40 http://nla.gov.au/nla.party-617536 Australian Antarctic Data Centre biota oceans ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION EARTH SCIENCE ATMOSPHERE ATMOSPHERIC RADIATION CHLOROPHYLL BIOSPHERE VEGETATION PROTISTS BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION PHYTOPLANKTON AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS PLANKTON CAROTENOIDS CHEMTAX CHLOROPHYLL A CLIMATE CHANGE CTD DATE DEPTH LATITUDE LONGITUDE TEMPERATURE UV UV-B SHIPS OCEAN &gt SOUTHERN OCEAN CONTINENT &gt ANTARCTICA GEOGRAPHIC REGION &gt POLAR dataset ftands 2020-01-05T21:17:10Z This is a parent metadata record for work carried out as part of ASAC/AAS project 40. See the child metadata records for further information. More than 95% of the biomass in the Southern Ocean is microscopic - single celled plants, animals, bacteria and viruses. We are studying the factors that control their distribution and abundance - oceanographic and seasonal conditions, their physiology, and grazing - in order to model their vital roles as food for other organisms and their influence in moderating global climate change through absorption of CO2 and production of DMS. We are also addressing the changes expected in microbial communities through effects of climate change - global warming, sea ice retreat, ocean acidification and enhanced ultraviolet radiation. This project aims to determine the role of microorganisms in the Southern Ocean. The major objectives are to: * Identify and quantify key protistan components of the Southern Ocean ecosystem and study their autoecology. * Identify environmental and ecological processes that control abundance of key microbial components. * Determine interactions between key microbial components to quantify major pathways of carbon flow. * Determine the activity and viability of bacterioplankton and protists in the Southern Ocean. * Distinguish different microbial communities by identifying key taxa and associations so that processes such as primary production, respiration, grazing and particle flux can be readily parameterised in ecological models. * Determine the effect of elevated CO2 concentrations on microbial populations and processes. Taken from the 2008-2009 Progress Report: Progress against objectives: 1. Ongoing sampling from Astrolabe has continued, with 3 return voyages being sampled for phytoplankton species, chlorophyll a and other pigments, coccolithophorid counts and DNA profiles, in conjunction with measurements of CO2, ocean structure, fluorescence and ocean colour by CSIRO / CRC colleagues. 2. Three sets of minicosm experiments were conducted at Davis station with 7 staff spending 4.5 - 5.5 months on site. These experiments consistently found that acidification caused blooms of nanoplanktonic diatoms and increased bacterial activity, apparently by inhibition of microheterotroph grazers, at the expense of larger cells that are more readily ingested by grazers such as krill. We showed for the first time in Antarctic waters that pCO2 affects the structure and function Antarctic microbial communities in a way that may reduce food availability to large grazers. Over 100 cultures of "winners and losers" from such experiments were isolated and returned to Australia. These will form the basis for further physiological experiments including molecular assays. 3. Submission and acceptance of 8 papers from the BROKE-West cruise (5 as senior author). These showed the interactions between bottom-up (micronutient) top-down (grazing) control in structuring microbial populations in the marginal ice zone. Five biogeographic zones were identified on the basis of species composition, and the productivity was measured for each zone. Microzooplankton grazing experiments found that grazing within that microbial loop consumed a significant proportion of new productivity. In some areas later in the season, all productivity was consumed by microheterotrophs, rather than metazoans such as krill. A time sequence was identified for seeding and development of components of ice edge blooms, subsequent grazing and decline and a mechanism postulated for export of micronutrients (e.g. iron) by grazing and sedimentation that prevents subsequent development of surface water blooms and constrains populations to a deep chlorophyll maximum below the level of a nutricline. 4. Detailed analysis of greater than 30 strains of keystone species Emiliania huxleyi of two morphotypes in conjunction with Clara Hoppe (Masters student, Alfred Wegener Institute) and Suellen Cook (PhD student, University of Tasmania) showed consistent differences between strains in terms of pigmentation, responses to light and genetics. The two morphotypes appear to be adapted to different mixing regimes north and south of the Polar Front; the southern form may represent a new species. For a full list of references associated with this project, see the project link at the provided URL. Dataset Alfred Wegener Institute Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Ocean acidification Sea ice Southern Ocean Research Data Australia (Australian National Data Service - ANDS) Antarctic Astrolabe ENVELOPE(140.000,140.000,-66.733,-66.733) Davis Station ENVELOPE(77.968,77.968,-68.576,-68.576) Davis-Station ENVELOPE(77.968,77.968,-68.576,-68.576) Southern Ocean ENVELOPE(60.0,180.0,-43.0,-70.0)