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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-11-02
    Description: An ex situ experimental mesocosm system was employed to test the effects of climate change drivers temperature, salinity, and reduced light on Arctic kelp communities in Ny-Ålesund, Svalbard from 03/07/2021 –26/08/2021. Three experimental conditions (with 3x replicates) manipulating temperature and salinity as offset values from a dynamic real-time control condition were used to increase temperature on the order of +3.3 and +5.3 °C, freshening by a decrease of ~ 4 and ~ 5 in salinity, along with a static irradiance attenuation at 30 and 50 %. In each mesocosm, oxygen (% O2, temperature, salinity, and flow rate were monitored minutely for 2 months using in situ optical and conductivity sensors paired with flow meters plumbed to the incoming water line. Data were logged on a microSD card. The collected environmental temperature and salinity data were paired with O2 concentration measured during closed incubations which occurred weekly over the experimental period to assess the effects on kelp community metabolism.
    Keywords: Climate change; Conductivity digital sensor, Aqualabo, PC4E; DATE/TIME; ecosystems; experimental system; Flow rate; MESO; Mesocosm experiment; multi-stressors; Ny_Ålesund_Mesocosm_2021; Ny-Ålesund, Spitsbergen; Oxygen Optical digital sensor, Aqualabo, PODOC; Oxygen saturation; Replicate; Salinity; Temperature, water; Vortex flow meter, ifm electronic gmbh, SV3150
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 4455303 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-04-23
    Description: Arctic marine ecosystems are experiencing rapid environmental change with respect to warming. This is leading to an increased frequency, duration, and intensity of marine heatwaves. The impact of these stochastic heatwave events have the potential to negatively effect temperature-sensitive, habitat forming, kelp, that exist in the lower Arctic region. We tested the potential impacts of two heatwave events on mixed kelp communities occurring in the lower Arctic by conducting a 1-month ex situ mesocosm experiment in Tromsø, Norway. Each mesocosm was stocked with ~ 2.5 kg fw (fresh weight) of kelp, 200 g fw of snails and mussels, and ~ 750 g of sea urchins. Three experimental conditions were tested: a constant high temperature which was + 1.76°C above a dynamic control, and two heatwave scenarios. Scenario 1 was a long duration at + 2.8°C above the control for 2 weeks, and scenario 2 was a high frequency and magnitude treatment with conditions + 3.8°C above the control. This occurred at two peaks that were one weak apart and returned to + 1.76°C in-between. Three-hour incubations were performed to examine net community productivity (NCP) for the mixed kelp communities. We identified that both heatwave scenarios diminished the total gross production over the experimental period compared to the control and between scenario 1 and scenario 2. Scenario 1 appeared to exhibit the lowest total gross community production over the experimental period.
    Keywords: Analysis date/time, experiment; Arctic Biodiversity & Livelihoods; Climate change; Conductivity digital sensor, Aqualabo, PC4E; ecosystems; Experiment; FACE-IT; Incubation duration; kelp; marine heatwaves (MHWs); MESO; Mesocosm experiment; Net community production; Oxygen; Oxygen Optical digital sensor, Aqualabo, PODOC; Photosynthetic Active Radiation Logger (PAR), Odyssey®; Radiation, photosynthetically active per minute; Replicates; Treatment; Treatment: salinity; Treatment: temperature; Tromsø_Mesocosm_2022; Tromsø, Norway
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 196010 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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