Changing Views of Arctic Protists (Marine Microbial Eukaryotes) in a Changing Arctic

Advances in sequencing technology and the environmental genomic approaches have brought attention to the vastness of protist biodiversity. While over much of the world’s oceans the species and phylotypes making up this diversity are assumed to be something previously hidden and now revealed, the rec...

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Main Author: Lovejoy, Connie
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Polish
Published: Acta Protozoologica 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ejournals.eu/sj/index.php/AProto/article/view/4099
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spelling ftejournalsojs:oai:ojs.www.ejournals.eu:article/4099 2023-05-15T14:35:57+02:00 Changing Views of Arctic Protists (Marine Microbial Eukaryotes) in a Changing Arctic Lovejoy, Connie 2015-09-11 application/pdf http://www.ejournals.eu/sj/index.php/AProto/article/view/4099 pol pol Acta Protozoologica http://www.ejournals.eu/sj/index.php/AProto/article/view/4099/4071 http://www.ejournals.eu/sj/index.php/AProto/article/view/4099 ##submission.copyrightStatement## Acta Protozoologica; Vol 53, No 1 (2014); 91–100 1689-0027 0065-1583 Polar marine microbial eukaryotes protists water masses climate change Subsurface Chlorophyll Maxima High Throughput Sequencing info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Recenzowany artykuł 2015 ftejournalsojs 2020-03-01T09:10:54Z Advances in sequencing technology and the environmental genomic approaches have brought attention to the vastness of protist biodiversity. While over much of the world’s oceans the species and phylotypes making up this diversity are assumed to be something previously hidden and now revealed, the recent rapid changes in the Arctic mean that such assumptions may be a simplification. Historical morphological species data can be used to validate new records provided that more of these species are identified using standard molecular markers. Environmental surveys can also go further by identifying species over regions, seasons and depths. High throughput sequencing and bioinformatics tools provide a means of monitoring and eventually predicting the consequences of change. We give an example of how microbial eukaryote communities differ over pan-arctic scales, emphasizing the need for additional sampling and the need for caution in extrapolating the results of one region to the entire Arctic. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Climate change Portal Czasopism Naukowych (E-Journals) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Portal Czasopism Naukowych (E-Journals)
op_collection_id ftejournalsojs
language Polish
topic Polar
marine microbial eukaryotes
protists
water masses
climate change
Subsurface Chlorophyll Maxima
High Throughput Sequencing
spellingShingle Polar
marine microbial eukaryotes
protists
water masses
climate change
Subsurface Chlorophyll Maxima
High Throughput Sequencing
Lovejoy, Connie
Changing Views of Arctic Protists (Marine Microbial Eukaryotes) in a Changing Arctic
topic_facet Polar
marine microbial eukaryotes
protists
water masses
climate change
Subsurface Chlorophyll Maxima
High Throughput Sequencing
description Advances in sequencing technology and the environmental genomic approaches have brought attention to the vastness of protist biodiversity. While over much of the world’s oceans the species and phylotypes making up this diversity are assumed to be something previously hidden and now revealed, the recent rapid changes in the Arctic mean that such assumptions may be a simplification. Historical morphological species data can be used to validate new records provided that more of these species are identified using standard molecular markers. Environmental surveys can also go further by identifying species over regions, seasons and depths. High throughput sequencing and bioinformatics tools provide a means of monitoring and eventually predicting the consequences of change. We give an example of how microbial eukaryote communities differ over pan-arctic scales, emphasizing the need for additional sampling and the need for caution in extrapolating the results of one region to the entire Arctic.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lovejoy, Connie
author_facet Lovejoy, Connie
author_sort Lovejoy, Connie
title Changing Views of Arctic Protists (Marine Microbial Eukaryotes) in a Changing Arctic
title_short Changing Views of Arctic Protists (Marine Microbial Eukaryotes) in a Changing Arctic
title_full Changing Views of Arctic Protists (Marine Microbial Eukaryotes) in a Changing Arctic
title_fullStr Changing Views of Arctic Protists (Marine Microbial Eukaryotes) in a Changing Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Changing Views of Arctic Protists (Marine Microbial Eukaryotes) in a Changing Arctic
title_sort changing views of arctic protists (marine microbial eukaryotes) in a changing arctic
publisher Acta Protozoologica
publishDate 2015
url http://www.ejournals.eu/sj/index.php/AProto/article/view/4099
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Climate change
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
op_source Acta Protozoologica; Vol 53, No 1 (2014); 91–100
1689-0027
0065-1583
op_relation http://www.ejournals.eu/sj/index.php/AProto/article/view/4099/4071
http://www.ejournals.eu/sj/index.php/AProto/article/view/4099
op_rights ##submission.copyrightStatement##
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