Photosynthesis in Antarctic sea ice diatoms

This thesis was conducted to apply new techniques for measuring photosynthesis in Antarctic sea ice diatoms. A systematic approach of investigations was applied to obtain precise measurements of photosynthesis under natural conditions in the field from which questions were derived for further analys...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mock, Thomas
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/9117/
https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/9117/1/Moc2003g.pdf
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.19632
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.19632.d001
Description
Summary:This thesis was conducted to apply new techniques for measuring photosynthesis in Antarctic sea ice diatoms. A systematic approach of investigations was applied to obtain precise measurements of photosynthesis under natural conditions in the field from which questions were derived for further analysis in the laboratory. In situ measurements with the tracer 14C through the entire thickness of a young sea ice floe revealed that algae are able to actively assimilate dissolved inorganic carbon under extreme conditions (e.g. -7°C, < 10 µmol photons m-2) after inclusion into newly formed sea ice. These measurements were conducted with ice slices suspended in a new incubator. Unfortunately such bulk measurements did not provide encompass photosynthesis prevailing in the network of brine channels, pockets or bubbles. New sensors (oxygen micro-optodes) were therefore introduced into sea ice research which withstand freezing without damage, an important prerequisite to measuring oxygen dynamics directly within brine channels or brine pockets without disturbing the ice texture or brine chemistry. A new laboratory sea ice microcosm was developed to simulate natural conditions of sea ice and to cultivating a sea-ice diatom (Fragilariopsis cylindrus) directly within brine channels. Hence, changes of environmental conditions (e.g. melting, freezing, nutrient and light limitation) can now be simulated in the laboratory and effects on diatom photosynthesis can be investigated with the optodes without disturbing the habitat. However, how changes of environmental conditions influence photosynthesis and how these diatoms are generally adapted to their habitat still remained unresolved. Consequently, the first molecular data base of an obligate psychrophilic diatom (Fragilariopis cylindrus) was conducted using an EST (expressed sequence tag) approach under freezing conditions. This preliminary EST-library consists of 189 unique sequences. More than half (59%) of these sequences could not be identified by GenBank comparison, ...