Accelerating phytoplankton phenomics through FTIR spectroscopy

University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Science. Marine phytoplankton play a driving role in global biogeochemical cycling, providing fuel for marine and terrestrial ecosystems, and removing substantial quantities of CO₂ from the atmosphere. Phytoplankton respond to environmental change by varyi...

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Main Author: Sackett, OEM
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10453/34480
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spelling ftunivtsydney:oai:opus.lib.uts.edu.au:10453/34480 2023-05-15T18:24:46+02:00 Accelerating phytoplankton phenomics through FTIR spectroscopy Sackett, OEM 2015 Thesis (PhD) application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10453/34480 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10453/34480 Thesis 2015 ftunivtsydney 2022-03-13T13:55:59Z University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Science. Marine phytoplankton play a driving role in global biogeochemical cycling, providing fuel for marine and terrestrial ecosystems, and removing substantial quantities of CO₂ from the atmosphere. Phytoplankton respond to environmental change by varying their phenotypes, including photophysiology, macromolecular composition and morphology. Southern Ocean phytoplankton are subjected to one of the most extreme habitats on earth, resulting in great phenotypic variation between and within taxonomic groups. Given they provide a significant net sink of atmospheric CO₂ and support the most biologically productive ecosystem on earth, improving our ability to predict the responses of Southern Ocean phytoplankton to environmental change is of global importance. At present, our ability to predict the responses of these critical organisms to environmental change, including climate change, is limited by a bottleneck in the efficiency with which we can characterise phytoplankton phenotypes. This thesis demonstrates the feasibility of accelerating phytoplankton phenomics using Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) microspectroscopy, a powerful yet under-utilised frontier technology. The extensive phenotypic variation shown by Southern Ocean phytoplankton provided excellent scope for demonstrating the power of the microspectroscopic approach. Coupling the microspectroscopic approach with multivariate modeling tools enabled the characterisation of phenotypic plasticity from cell FTIR spectra. When combined with mass spectrometry data, cell FTIR spectra provided accurate estimates of multiple phenotypic parameters including cellular protein, carbon and energy. Of particular value, spectroscopic models were able to accurately estimate rates of carbon production from samples taken at a single time-point, circumventing the need to take measurements over time. Further, the high spatial resolution achievable with microspectroscopy enabled the analysis of individual cells, revealing taxon-specific responses to iron availability within samples taken from a mixed natural Southern Ocean phytoplankton bloom. This work demonstrates that incorporating FTIR microspectroscopy into the phenomics toolbox will improve the efficiency of phenotypic data collection and, in combination with multivariate modeling, will enable the development of powerful, taxon-specific predictive phenomic models. Thesis Southern Ocean University of Technology Sydney: OPUS - Open Publications of UTS Scholars Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection University of Technology Sydney: OPUS - Open Publications of UTS Scholars
op_collection_id ftunivtsydney
language English
description University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Science. Marine phytoplankton play a driving role in global biogeochemical cycling, providing fuel for marine and terrestrial ecosystems, and removing substantial quantities of CO₂ from the atmosphere. Phytoplankton respond to environmental change by varying their phenotypes, including photophysiology, macromolecular composition and morphology. Southern Ocean phytoplankton are subjected to one of the most extreme habitats on earth, resulting in great phenotypic variation between and within taxonomic groups. Given they provide a significant net sink of atmospheric CO₂ and support the most biologically productive ecosystem on earth, improving our ability to predict the responses of Southern Ocean phytoplankton to environmental change is of global importance. At present, our ability to predict the responses of these critical organisms to environmental change, including climate change, is limited by a bottleneck in the efficiency with which we can characterise phytoplankton phenotypes. This thesis demonstrates the feasibility of accelerating phytoplankton phenomics using Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) microspectroscopy, a powerful yet under-utilised frontier technology. The extensive phenotypic variation shown by Southern Ocean phytoplankton provided excellent scope for demonstrating the power of the microspectroscopic approach. Coupling the microspectroscopic approach with multivariate modeling tools enabled the characterisation of phenotypic plasticity from cell FTIR spectra. When combined with mass spectrometry data, cell FTIR spectra provided accurate estimates of multiple phenotypic parameters including cellular protein, carbon and energy. Of particular value, spectroscopic models were able to accurately estimate rates of carbon production from samples taken at a single time-point, circumventing the need to take measurements over time. Further, the high spatial resolution achievable with microspectroscopy enabled the analysis of individual cells, revealing taxon-specific responses to iron availability within samples taken from a mixed natural Southern Ocean phytoplankton bloom. This work demonstrates that incorporating FTIR microspectroscopy into the phenomics toolbox will improve the efficiency of phenotypic data collection and, in combination with multivariate modeling, will enable the development of powerful, taxon-specific predictive phenomic models.
format Thesis
author Sackett, OEM
spellingShingle Sackett, OEM
Accelerating phytoplankton phenomics through FTIR spectroscopy
author_facet Sackett, OEM
author_sort Sackett, OEM
title Accelerating phytoplankton phenomics through FTIR spectroscopy
title_short Accelerating phytoplankton phenomics through FTIR spectroscopy
title_full Accelerating phytoplankton phenomics through FTIR spectroscopy
title_fullStr Accelerating phytoplankton phenomics through FTIR spectroscopy
title_full_unstemmed Accelerating phytoplankton phenomics through FTIR spectroscopy
title_sort accelerating phytoplankton phenomics through ftir spectroscopy
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10453/34480
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10453/34480
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