CarbonBridge May 2014: Zooplankton abundance, biovolume and size structure along transect D crossing the Fram Strait

Continuous data on zooplankton abundance and biovolume were collected in concert with data on the biophysical environment along a transect crossing the Atlantic Water inflow into the Arctic Ocean, in May 2014. The data were sampled by a Laser Optical Plankton Counter (LOPC; ODIM-Brooke Ocean Rolls R...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Basedow, Sünnje Linnéa
Format: Dataset
Language:English
Published: PANGAEA 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.879808
Description
Summary:Continuous data on zooplankton abundance and biovolume were collected in concert with data on the biophysical environment along a transect crossing the Atlantic Water inflow into the Arctic Ocean, in May 2014. The data were sampled by a Laser Optical Plankton Counter (LOPC; ODIM-Brooke Ocean Rolls Royce Canada Ltd., Herman et al. 2004) and a Conductivity-Temperature-Depth Sensor (CTD, Applied Microsystems Micro CTD), both mounted on a free-fall Moving Vessel Profiler (MVP, ODIM Brooke Ocean, Rolls Royce Canada Ltd., Herman et al. 1998). The MVP was used in free-wheel mode while the ship moved forward along transects, sampling depth was from surface to 10 m above the bottom, but restricted to 1000 m at maximum. Only down profiles are used, distance between profiles was ca. 0.5 km on the shelf and ca. 5.5 km offshelf. West of 5 degree E it was too risky to deploy the MVP due to ice floes, here the LOPC was mounted on a sturdy rosette frame together with a different CTD (Seabird 19plusV2, Seabird Electronics Inc., USA). In this case the instruments were deployed vertically at two stations along the transects, and lowered with a speed of 0.7-0.8 m s**-1. Based on the LOPC data, abundance (individuals/m**3) and biovolume (mm**3/m**3) were calculated as described in the LOPC Software Operation Manual [(Anonymous, 2006), http://www.brooke-ocean.com/index.html]. LOPC data were regrouped into 49 size groups of equal log10(body volume) increments, see Edvardsen et al. (2002, doi:10.3354/meps227205). LOPC data quality was checked as described in Basedow et al. (2013, doi:10.1016/j.pocean.2012.10.005). CTD data were screened for erroneous (out of range) values and then averaged to the same frequency as the LOPC data (2 Hz). All data were processed using especially developed scripts in the python programming language. The LOPC is an optical instrument designed to count and measure particles (0.1 to 30 mm equivalent spherical diameter) in the water column, see Herman et al., (2004, doi:10.1093/plankt/fbh095). In addition to ...