Pan-Arctic patterns of planktonic microbial abundance and processes: controlling factors and potenti

2nd International Ocean Research Conference, One planet one ocean, 17-21 November 2014, Barcelona, Spain The Arctic Ocean is rapidly changing where increasing water temperatures and rapid loss of sea-ice will likely influence the structure and functioning of the entire ecosystem. The aim of this stu...

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Main Author: Vaqué, Dolors
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/125218
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spelling ftcsic:oai:digital.csic.es:10261/125218 2024-02-11T10:00:18+01:00 Pan-Arctic patterns of planktonic microbial abundance and processes: controlling factors and potenti Vaqué, Dolors 2014-11-17 http://hdl.handle.net/10261/125218 unknown http://www.iocunesco-oneplanetoneocean.fnob.org/ Sí 2nd International Ocean Research Conference (2014) http://hdl.handle.net/10261/125218 none comunicación de congreso http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794 2014 ftcsic 2024-01-16T10:12:02Z 2nd International Ocean Research Conference, One planet one ocean, 17-21 November 2014, Barcelona, Spain The Arctic Ocean is rapidly changing where increasing water temperatures and rapid loss of sea-ice will likely influence the structure and functioning of the entire ecosystem. The aim of this study was to synthesize the current state of knowledge on microbial abundances and processes from a Pan-Arctic perspective and attempt to predict how patterns may change under a warming scenario. To achieve this, we a) compared published available data for viral, bacterial and protist abundance, bacterial production (BP), respiration, grazing rates (GT) and viral lyses (VL) among different Arctic Regions, b) determined the temperature sensitivities of the afore mentioned processes, and c) tested which factors beyond temperature influenced these rates. Our results showed that 1) microbial abundances and rate processes are higher in the Eastern Arctic, 2) grazer control of bacteria is also stronger in the East (more direct transfer of bacterial carbon (C) to higher trophic levels), 3) bacterial loss by VL is proportionally more important in the West (greater recycling of bacterial C), and 4) there is a differential response to warming temperatures among processes. BP and GT responded similarly and more strongly to increases in temperature than VL did, suggesting a shift in dominant predator control for the Western region under a warming scenario. However, resource-related factors also exerted a strong influence in regulating these rates. Although generalized patterns could be elucidated, more information is needed to predict and understand how a changing Arctic will alter C pathways in the microbial food web among regions and over seasons Peer Reviewed Conference Object Arctic Arctic Ocean Sea ice Digital.CSIC (Spanish National Research Council) Arctic Arctic Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection Digital.CSIC (Spanish National Research Council)
op_collection_id ftcsic
language unknown
description 2nd International Ocean Research Conference, One planet one ocean, 17-21 November 2014, Barcelona, Spain The Arctic Ocean is rapidly changing where increasing water temperatures and rapid loss of sea-ice will likely influence the structure and functioning of the entire ecosystem. The aim of this study was to synthesize the current state of knowledge on microbial abundances and processes from a Pan-Arctic perspective and attempt to predict how patterns may change under a warming scenario. To achieve this, we a) compared published available data for viral, bacterial and protist abundance, bacterial production (BP), respiration, grazing rates (GT) and viral lyses (VL) among different Arctic Regions, b) determined the temperature sensitivities of the afore mentioned processes, and c) tested which factors beyond temperature influenced these rates. Our results showed that 1) microbial abundances and rate processes are higher in the Eastern Arctic, 2) grazer control of bacteria is also stronger in the East (more direct transfer of bacterial carbon (C) to higher trophic levels), 3) bacterial loss by VL is proportionally more important in the West (greater recycling of bacterial C), and 4) there is a differential response to warming temperatures among processes. BP and GT responded similarly and more strongly to increases in temperature than VL did, suggesting a shift in dominant predator control for the Western region under a warming scenario. However, resource-related factors also exerted a strong influence in regulating these rates. Although generalized patterns could be elucidated, more information is needed to predict and understand how a changing Arctic will alter C pathways in the microbial food web among regions and over seasons Peer Reviewed
format Conference Object
author Vaqué, Dolors
spellingShingle Vaqué, Dolors
Pan-Arctic patterns of planktonic microbial abundance and processes: controlling factors and potenti
author_facet Vaqué, Dolors
author_sort Vaqué, Dolors
title Pan-Arctic patterns of planktonic microbial abundance and processes: controlling factors and potenti
title_short Pan-Arctic patterns of planktonic microbial abundance and processes: controlling factors and potenti
title_full Pan-Arctic patterns of planktonic microbial abundance and processes: controlling factors and potenti
title_fullStr Pan-Arctic patterns of planktonic microbial abundance and processes: controlling factors and potenti
title_full_unstemmed Pan-Arctic patterns of planktonic microbial abundance and processes: controlling factors and potenti
title_sort pan-arctic patterns of planktonic microbial abundance and processes: controlling factors and potenti
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/125218
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Sea ice
op_relation http://www.iocunesco-oneplanetoneocean.fnob.org/

2nd International Ocean Research Conference (2014)
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/125218
op_rights none
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