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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-04-20
    Description: We examined the growth response of a brackish snail (Hydrobiidae) against multiple temperature treatments in a mesocosm located beside the Alfred Wegener Institute Wadden Sea Station on Sylt (55°01′19.2″N, 8°26′17.7″E). Bulk sediments were collected south of Pellworm (54° 31' 55.83"N, 8° 42' 40.36"E) at low tide on March 22, 2022, transferred to mesh-lined crates and introduced to mesocosm tanks (170 cm × 85 cm × 1800 L). Experimental warming treatments were conducted using three heaters per tank (Titanium heater 500 W, Aqua Medic, Bissendorf, Germany). The full specifications for the mesocosms are already published (Pansch et al., 2016). Throughout the experimental warming period, four sampling events (March 30, April 25, May 24, June 20) were conducted to core sediments. Sediment cores were washed and sieved (1mm mesh size) to disaggregate infauna. Individuals were separated for the common hydrobiid mudsnail, which were subsequently imaged in groups on a typical petri plate under stereomicroscopy. A semi-automatic object segmentation and size measurement approach was developed to rapidly differentiate and measure individuals from images. Segmentation was highly accurate and precise against manual length measurements (end-to-end; mm) collected in ImageJ for 4595 snails. Scaling the segmentation method across the full dataset estimated 〉40,000 snails and presented a complex species-specific response to warming. The enclosed dataset represents all raw, processed, and segmented images (n= 3201) produced by this study.
    Keywords: Computer vision; DAM sustainMare - iSeal: Trans- and interdisciplinary Social-ecological network analysis based on long-term monitoring, experimental data and stakeholders' assessment; File type; Gastropods; Identification; Image, specimens; Image, specimens (File Size); Image, specimens (MD5 Hash); Image, specimens (Media Type); Image number/name; Image segmentation; iSeal; Magnification; MESO; mesocosm experiment; Mesocosm experiment; Method comment; Object Based Image Analysis; Research Mission of the German Marine Research Alliance (DAM): Protection and sustainable use of marine areas; Resolution; Sample code/label; Sampling date/time, experiment; Stereo microscope, Nikon, SMZ18; coupled with Microscope camera, Nikon, DS-Fi3 [5.39 megapixels, LED base light with oblique coherent contrast]; sustainMare; Sylt_Mesocosm_2022; Tank number; Taxon/taxa, unique identification; Taxon/taxa, unique identification (Semantic URI); Taxon/taxa, unique identification (URI); Treatment: temperature description; Type; Type of study; Wadden Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 44814 data points
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Legal requirement in Europe asks for Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management (EBFM) in European seas, including consideration of trophic interactions and minimization of negative impacts of fishing on food webs and ecosystem functioning. This study presents the first mass-balanced ecosystem model focused on the western Baltic Sea (WBS). Results show that heavy fishing pressure exerted on the WBS has forced top predators such as harbour porpoise and cod to cover their dietary needs by shifting from forage fish to other prey or find food outside of the model area. The model was then developed to explore the dynamics of four future fishery scenarios: (1) business as usual (BAU), (2) maximum sustainable fishing (F = FMSY), (3) half of FMSY, and (4) EBFM with F = 0.5 FMSY for forage fish and F = 0.8 FMSY for other fish. Simulations show that BAU would perpetuate low catches from depleted stocks with a high risk of extinction for harbour porpoise. In contrast, the EBFM scenario would allow the recovery of harbour porpoise, forage fish and cod with increases in catch of herring and cod. EBFM promotes ecosystem resilience to eutrophication and ocean warming, and through the rebuilding of commercial stocks increases by more than three times carbon sequestration compared to BAU. The model provides an interrelated assessment of trophic guilds in the WBS, as required by European law to assess whether European seas are in good environmental status.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: The planktonic diversity throughout the oceans is vital to ecosystem functioning and linked to environmental change. Plankton monitoring tools have advanced considerably with high-throughput in-situ digital cameras and genomic sequencing, opening new challenges for high-frequency observations of community composition, structure, and species discovery. Here, we combine multi-marker metabarcoding based on nuclear 18S (V4) and plastidial 16S (V4–V5) rRNA gene amplicons with a digital in-line holographic microscope to provide a synoptic diversity survey of eukaryotic plankton along the Newfoundland Shelf (Canada) during the winter transition phase of the North Atlantic bloom phenomenon. Metabarcoding revealed a rich eukaryotic diversity unidentifiable in the imaging samples, confirming the presence of ecologically important saprophytic protists which were unclassifiable in matching images, and detecting important groups unobserved or taxonomically unresolved during similar sequencing campaigns in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean. In turn, imaging analysis provided quantitative observations of widely prevalent plankton from every trophic level. Despite contrasting plankton compositions portrayed by each sampling method, both capture broad spatial differences between the northern and southern sectors of the Newfoundland Shelf and suggest complementary estimations of important features in eukaryotic assemblages. Future tasks will involve standardizing digital imaging and metabarcoding for wider use and consistent, comparable ocean observations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-04-10
    Description: 1. The expansion of scientific image data holds great promise to quantify individuals, size distributions and traits. Computer vision tools are especially powerful to automate data mining of images and thus have been applied widely across studies in aquatic and terrestrial ecology. Yet marine benthic communities, especially infauna, remain understudied despite their dominance of marine biomass, biodiversity and playing critical roles in ecosystem functioning. 2. Here, we disaggregated infauna from sediment cores taken throughout the spring transition (April-June) from a near-natural mesocosm setup under experimental warming (Ambient, +1.5 degrees C, +3.0 degrees C). Numerically abundant mudsnails were imaged in batches under stereomicroscopy, from which we automatically counted and sized individuals using a superpixel-based segmentation algorithm. Our segmentation approach was based on clustering superpixels, which naturally partition images by low-level properties (e.g., colour, shape and edges) and allow instance-based segmentation to extract all individuals from each image. 3. We demonstrate high accuracy and precision for counting and sizing individuals, through a procedure that is robust to the number of individuals per image (5-65) and to size ranges spanning an order of magnitude (〈750 mu m to 7.4 mm). The segmentation routine provided at least a fivefold increase in efficiency compared with manual measurements. Scaling this approach to a larger dataset tallied 〉40k individuals and revealed overall growth in response to springtime warming. 4. We illustrate that image processing and segmentation workflows can be built upon existing open-access R packages, underlining the potential for wider adoption of computer vision tools among ecologists. The image-based approach also generated reproducible data products that, alongside our scripts, we have made freely available. This work reinforces the need for next-generation monitoring of benthic communities, especially infauna, which can display differential responses to average warming.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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