Melt Procedure Affects the Photosynthetic Response of Sea Ice Algae.

The accuracy of sea ice algal production estimates is influenced by the range of melting procedures used in studies to obtain a liquid sample for incubation, particularly in relation to the duration of melt and the approach to buffering for osmotic shock. In this research, ice algal photophysiology...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Campbell, Karley, Mundy, C. J., Juhl, Andrew R., Dalman, Laura A., Michel, Christine, Galley, Ryan J., Else, Brent E., Geilfus, Nicolas X., Rysgaard, Søren
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: UNESCO/IOC 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.25607/obp-523
https://www.oceanbestpractices.net/handle/11329/991
id ftdatacite:10.25607/obp-523
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.25607/obp-523 2023-05-15T15:12:33+02:00 Melt Procedure Affects the Photosynthetic Response of Sea Ice Algae. Campbell, Karley Mundy, C. J. Juhl, Andrew R. Dalman, Laura A. Michel, Christine Galley, Ryan J. Else, Brent E. Geilfus, Nicolas X. Rysgaard, Søren 2019 14pp. https://dx.doi.org/10.25607/obp-523 https://www.oceanbestpractices.net/handle/11329/991 en eng UNESCO/IOC Attribution 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 CC-BY Algae Salinity stress Photophysiology Sample melt Parameter DisciplineBiological oceanographyMacroalgae and seagrass Other CreativeWork article Journal Contribution 2019 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.25607/obp-523 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The accuracy of sea ice algal production estimates is influenced by the range of melting procedures used in studies to obtain a liquid sample for incubation, particularly in relation to the duration of melt and the approach to buffering for osmotic shock. In this research, ice algal photophysiology from 14C incubations was compared in field samples prepared by three melt procedures: (i) a rapid 4 h melt of the bottommost ( < 1 cm) ice algal layer scraped into a large volume of filtered seawater (salinity 27–30), (ii) melt of a bottom 5 cm section diluted into a moderate volume of filtered seawater over 24 h (salinity 20–24), and (iii) melt of a bottom 5 cm section without any filtered seawater dilution over about 48 h (salinity 10–12). Maximum photosynthetic rate, photosynthetic efficiency and production at zero irradiance were significantly affected by the melt treatment employed in experiments. All variables were greatest in the highly diluted scrape sample and lowest in the bulk-ice samples melted in the absence of filtered seawater. Laboratory experiments exposing cultures of the common sea ice diatom Nitzschia frigida to different salinities and light conditions suggested that the field-based responses can be attributed to the rapid ( < 4 h) adverse effects of exposing cells to low salinities during melt without dilution. The observed differences in primary production between melt treatments were estimated to account for over 60% of the variability in production estimates reported for the Arctic. Future studies are strongly encouraged to replicate salinity conditions representative of in situ values during the melting process to minimize hypoosmotic stress, thereby most accurately estimating primary production. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic ice algae Sea ice DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Algae
Salinity stress
Photophysiology
Sample melt
Parameter DisciplineBiological oceanographyMacroalgae and seagrass
spellingShingle Algae
Salinity stress
Photophysiology
Sample melt
Parameter DisciplineBiological oceanographyMacroalgae and seagrass
Campbell, Karley
Mundy, C. J.
Juhl, Andrew R.
Dalman, Laura A.
Michel, Christine
Galley, Ryan J.
Else, Brent E.
Geilfus, Nicolas X.
Rysgaard, Søren
Melt Procedure Affects the Photosynthetic Response of Sea Ice Algae.
topic_facet Algae
Salinity stress
Photophysiology
Sample melt
Parameter DisciplineBiological oceanographyMacroalgae and seagrass
description The accuracy of sea ice algal production estimates is influenced by the range of melting procedures used in studies to obtain a liquid sample for incubation, particularly in relation to the duration of melt and the approach to buffering for osmotic shock. In this research, ice algal photophysiology from 14C incubations was compared in field samples prepared by three melt procedures: (i) a rapid 4 h melt of the bottommost ( < 1 cm) ice algal layer scraped into a large volume of filtered seawater (salinity 27–30), (ii) melt of a bottom 5 cm section diluted into a moderate volume of filtered seawater over 24 h (salinity 20–24), and (iii) melt of a bottom 5 cm section without any filtered seawater dilution over about 48 h (salinity 10–12). Maximum photosynthetic rate, photosynthetic efficiency and production at zero irradiance were significantly affected by the melt treatment employed in experiments. All variables were greatest in the highly diluted scrape sample and lowest in the bulk-ice samples melted in the absence of filtered seawater. Laboratory experiments exposing cultures of the common sea ice diatom Nitzschia frigida to different salinities and light conditions suggested that the field-based responses can be attributed to the rapid ( < 4 h) adverse effects of exposing cells to low salinities during melt without dilution. The observed differences in primary production between melt treatments were estimated to account for over 60% of the variability in production estimates reported for the Arctic. Future studies are strongly encouraged to replicate salinity conditions representative of in situ values during the melting process to minimize hypoosmotic stress, thereby most accurately estimating primary production.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Campbell, Karley
Mundy, C. J.
Juhl, Andrew R.
Dalman, Laura A.
Michel, Christine
Galley, Ryan J.
Else, Brent E.
Geilfus, Nicolas X.
Rysgaard, Søren
author_facet Campbell, Karley
Mundy, C. J.
Juhl, Andrew R.
Dalman, Laura A.
Michel, Christine
Galley, Ryan J.
Else, Brent E.
Geilfus, Nicolas X.
Rysgaard, Søren
author_sort Campbell, Karley
title Melt Procedure Affects the Photosynthetic Response of Sea Ice Algae.
title_short Melt Procedure Affects the Photosynthetic Response of Sea Ice Algae.
title_full Melt Procedure Affects the Photosynthetic Response of Sea Ice Algae.
title_fullStr Melt Procedure Affects the Photosynthetic Response of Sea Ice Algae.
title_full_unstemmed Melt Procedure Affects the Photosynthetic Response of Sea Ice Algae.
title_sort melt procedure affects the photosynthetic response of sea ice algae.
publisher UNESCO/IOC
publishDate 2019
url https://dx.doi.org/10.25607/obp-523
https://www.oceanbestpractices.net/handle/11329/991
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
ice algae
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
ice algae
Sea ice
op_rights Attribution 4.0 International
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25607/obp-523
_version_ 1766343220345700352