Community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in eastern Svalbard

Coastal sea ice communities constitute a highly vulnerable yet little investigated part of the Arctic ecosystem. A better understanding of the Arctic sea ice ecosystem will aid in more accurate predictions of the ecological response to current climate change. Sea ice communities comprise microalgae...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Andreasen, Magnus Heide
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: The University of Bergen 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1956/20217
id ftunivbergen:oai:bora.uib.no:1956/20217
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivbergen:oai:bora.uib.no:1956/20217 2023-05-15T14:50:14+02:00 Community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in eastern Svalbard Andreasen, Magnus Heide 2019-06-18T22:00:20Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1956/20217 eng eng The University of Bergen https://hdl.handle.net/1956/20217 Copyright the Author. All rights reserved Arctic · Sea ice · Climate change · Nematodes · Polychaetes · Barcoding 751999 Master thesis 2019 ftunivbergen 2023-03-14T17:41:17Z Coastal sea ice communities constitute a highly vulnerable yet little investigated part of the Arctic ecosystem. A better understanding of the Arctic sea ice ecosystem will aid in more accurate predictions of the ecological response to current climate change. Sea ice communities comprise microalgae and meiofauna (20-500 μm) important to the existence and functioning of higher trophic levels. The response of sea ice-associated (sympagic) algae and meiofauna to cur- rent physical alterations in the Arctic will thus expectedly have ecosystem-wide consequences. Fundamental to the understanding of any ecosystem is knowledge on its taxa composition, species diversity and species functioning. This study investigated the community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in an unexplored region of eastern Sval- bard in March and April 2018. Ice cores were extracted for sympagic and pelagic meiofauna, chlo- rophyll a and physical variables in Inglefieldbukta and Agardhbukta. Microscope photography was applied to explore the size, feeding and reproduction of polychaetes and nematodes. Further, molecular barcoding aided in identifying sympagic polychaetes and nematodes from three addi- tional locations around Svalbard. Integrated sympagic meiofauna abundances ranged from 0 to 22 900 individuals m-2 with the most abundant and diverse communities occurring in April. Use of sea ice for overwintering, growth and reproduction was implied for nematodes, while polychaetes occurred only as feeding juveniles. Molecular analysis indicated the presence of two polychaete species not yet considered to be sympagic, Melaenis loveni and a Spio sp., and at least two nema- tode species not priorly described from Svalbard sea ice. The finding of M. loveni challenges the presumption of Scolelepis squamata as the resident sympagic polychaete in Svalbard. The nema- todes collected in this study likely provide the first molecular evidence for Theristus melnikovi and possibly the first sign of an Arctic ... Master Thesis Arctic Climate change Sea ice Svalbard University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB) Agardhbukta ENVELOPE(18.519,18.519,78.021,78.021) Arctic Svalbard
institution Open Polar
collection University of Bergen: Bergen Open Research Archive (BORA-UiB)
op_collection_id ftunivbergen
language English
topic Arctic · Sea ice · Climate change · Nematodes · Polychaetes · Barcoding
751999
spellingShingle Arctic · Sea ice · Climate change · Nematodes · Polychaetes · Barcoding
751999
Andreasen, Magnus Heide
Community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in eastern Svalbard
topic_facet Arctic · Sea ice · Climate change · Nematodes · Polychaetes · Barcoding
751999
description Coastal sea ice communities constitute a highly vulnerable yet little investigated part of the Arctic ecosystem. A better understanding of the Arctic sea ice ecosystem will aid in more accurate predictions of the ecological response to current climate change. Sea ice communities comprise microalgae and meiofauna (20-500 μm) important to the existence and functioning of higher trophic levels. The response of sea ice-associated (sympagic) algae and meiofauna to cur- rent physical alterations in the Arctic will thus expectedly have ecosystem-wide consequences. Fundamental to the understanding of any ecosystem is knowledge on its taxa composition, species diversity and species functioning. This study investigated the community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in an unexplored region of eastern Sval- bard in March and April 2018. Ice cores were extracted for sympagic and pelagic meiofauna, chlo- rophyll a and physical variables in Inglefieldbukta and Agardhbukta. Microscope photography was applied to explore the size, feeding and reproduction of polychaetes and nematodes. Further, molecular barcoding aided in identifying sympagic polychaetes and nematodes from three addi- tional locations around Svalbard. Integrated sympagic meiofauna abundances ranged from 0 to 22 900 individuals m-2 with the most abundant and diverse communities occurring in April. Use of sea ice for overwintering, growth and reproduction was implied for nematodes, while polychaetes occurred only as feeding juveniles. Molecular analysis indicated the presence of two polychaete species not yet considered to be sympagic, Melaenis loveni and a Spio sp., and at least two nema- tode species not priorly described from Svalbard sea ice. The finding of M. loveni challenges the presumption of Scolelepis squamata as the resident sympagic polychaete in Svalbard. The nema- todes collected in this study likely provide the first molecular evidence for Theristus melnikovi and possibly the first sign of an Arctic ...
format Master Thesis
author Andreasen, Magnus Heide
author_facet Andreasen, Magnus Heide
author_sort Andreasen, Magnus Heide
title Community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in eastern Svalbard
title_short Community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in eastern Svalbard
title_full Community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in eastern Svalbard
title_fullStr Community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in eastern Svalbard
title_full_unstemmed Community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in eastern Svalbard
title_sort community composition, population structure and phylogeny of coastal sympagic meiofauna in eastern svalbard
publisher The University of Bergen
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/1956/20217
long_lat ENVELOPE(18.519,18.519,78.021,78.021)
geographic Agardhbukta
Arctic
Svalbard
geographic_facet Agardhbukta
Arctic
Svalbard
genre Arctic
Climate change
Sea ice
Svalbard
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
Sea ice
Svalbard
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/1956/20217
op_rights Copyright the Author. All rights reserved
_version_ 1766321279146655744