Centric diatom communities found in the Antarctic sea ice

It has been generally accepted that the ice algal communities are dominated by pennate diatoms in the Arctic and Antarctic seas. However, two ice algal communities found near the Antarctic Continent were dominated by centric diatoms. One sample from the bottom layer of fast ice near Langhovde (69°12...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kentaro Watanabe
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Japanese
Published: National Institute of Polar Research 1982
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15094/00008288
https://doaj.org/article/cd9ad6cff5a2455f8a883561d51d8598
Description
Summary:It has been generally accepted that the ice algal communities are dominated by pennate diatoms in the Arctic and Antarctic seas. However, two ice algal communities found near the Antarctic Continent were dominated by centric diatoms. One sample from the bottom layer of fast ice near Langhovde (69°12′S, 39°37′E) on 12 October, 1970,was dominated by Porosira pseudodenticulata (HUST.) JOUSE. In another sample, Coscinodiscus furcatus KARSTEN was dominant, which was collected from the bottom layer of sea ice near Cape Bird (77°13′S, 166°28′E) on 21 December, 1971. The two centric diatom species were found to form a colony in water mount and seemed to have a nature of sedentary species as well as planktonic characters.