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  • apparent oxygen utilization; Benguela Upwelling System; BUSUC 1; Calculated according to Weiss and Price (1980); CTD, Sea-Bird SBE 911plus; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Event label; Field observation; Gas chromatography, Agilent 7820B, coupled with a flame ionization detector and an Electron Capture Detector; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; M157; M157_14-2; M157_16-3; M157_17-2; M157_2-8; Measured according to Sabbaghzadeh et al. (2021); Meteor (1986); Namibia; nitrous oxide; Nitrous oxide, dissolved; Nitrous oxide, dissolved, disequilibrium; Nitrous oxide, dry air; Nitrous oxide saturation; Oxygen, apparent utilization; oxygen minimum zone; Partial pressure of nitrous oxide in wet air; Sample code/label; Station label  (1)
  • standards of practice  (1)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-03-22
    Description: Upwelling systems are significant sources of atmospheric nitrous oxide (N₂O). The Benguela Upwelling System is one of the most productive regions worldwide and a temporally variable source of N₂O. Strong O₂ depletions above the shelf are favoring periodically OMZ formations. We aimed to assess underlying N₂O production and consumption processes on different temporal and spatial scales during austral winter in the Benguela Upwelling System, when O₂⁻deficiency in the water column is relatively low. The fieldwork took place during the cruise M157 (August 4ᵗʰ – September 16ᵗʰ 2019) onboard the R/V METEOR. This expedition included four close-coastal regions around Walvis Bay at 23°S, which presented the lowest O₂ concentrations near the seafloor and thus may provide hotspots of N₂O production. Seawater was collected in 10 L free-flow bottles by using a rosette system equipped with conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) sensors (SBE 911plus, Seabird-electronics, USA).Seawater samples were collected from 10 L free-flow bottles bubble-free, filled into 200 mL serum bottles and immediately fixed with saturated mercury chloride (HgCl₂). Concentrations of dissolved N₂O were measured by a purge and trap system using a dynamic headspace (Sabbaghzadeh et al., 2021). The N₂O gas saturation (N₂Oₛₐₜ in %) was calculated from the concentration ratio between the seawater sample and seawater equilibrated with the atmosphere. ∆N₂O (N₂O saturation disequilibrium in nmol L⁻¹) was calculated as the difference between the measured N₂O concentration and the atmospheric equilibrium N₂O concentration using Bunsen solubility coefficient (Weiss and Price, 1980). AOU (apparent oxygen utilization in µmol L⁻¹) expresses the O₂ consumption by microbial respiration and was calculated as the difference between the equilibrated O₂ and observed O₂ concentration with the same physico-chemical properties (Weiss and Price, 1980).
    Keywords: apparent oxygen utilization; Benguela Upwelling System; BUSUC 1; Calculated according to Weiss and Price (1980); CTD, Sea-Bird SBE 911plus; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Event label; Field observation; Gas chromatography, Agilent 7820B, coupled with a flame ionization detector and an Electron Capture Detector; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; M157; M157_14-2; M157_16-3; M157_17-2; M157_2-8; Measured according to Sabbaghzadeh et al. (2021); Meteor (1986); Namibia; nitrous oxide; Nitrous oxide, dissolved; Nitrous oxide, dissolved, disequilibrium; Nitrous oxide, dry air; Nitrous oxide saturation; Oxygen, apparent utilization; oxygen minimum zone; Partial pressure of nitrous oxide in wet air; Sample code/label; Station label
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 332 data points
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s), 2019. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Torres-Beltran, M., Mueller, A., Scofield, M., Pachiadaki, M. G., Taylor, C., Tyshchenko, K., Michiels, C., Lam, P., Ulloa, O., Jurgens, K., Hyun, J., Edgcomb, V. P., Crowe, S. A., & Hallam, S. J. Sampling and processing methods impact microbial community structure and potential activity in a seasonally anoxic fjord: Saanich Inlet, British Columbia. Frontiers in Marine Science, 6,(2019):132, doi:10.3389/fmars.2019.00132.
    Description: The Scientific Committee on Oceanographic Research (SCOR) Working Group 144 Microbial Community Responses to Ocean Deoxygenation workshop held in Vancouver, B.C on July 2014 had the primary objective of initiating a process to standardize operating procedures for compatible process rate and multi-omic (DNA, RNA, protein, and metabolite) data collection in marine oxygen minimum zones and other oxygen depleted waters. Workshop attendees participated in practical sampling and experimental activities in Saanich Inlet, British Columbia, a seasonally anoxic fjord. Experiments were designed to compare and cross-calibrate in situ versus bottle sampling methods to determine effects on microbial community structure and potential activity when using different filter combinations, filtration methods, and sample volumes. Resulting biomass was preserved for small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU or 16S rRNA) and SSU rRNA gene (rDNA) amplicon sequencing followed by downstream statistical and visual analyses. Results from these analyses showed that significant community shifts occurred between in situ versus on ship processed samples. For example, Bacteroidetes, Alphaproteobacteria, and Opisthokonta associated with on-ship filtration onto 0.4 μm filters increased fivefold compared to on-ship in-line 0.22 μm filters or 0.4 μm filters processed and preserved in situ. In contrast, Planctomycetes associated with 0.4 μm in situ filters increased fivefold compared to on-ship filtration onto 0.4 μm filters and on-ship in-line 0.22 μm filters. In addition, candidate divisions and Chloroflexi were primarily recovered when filtered onto 0.4 μm filters in situ. Results based on rRNA:rDNA ratios for microbial indicator groups revealed previously unrecognized roles of candidate divisions, Desulfarculales, and Desulfuromandales in sulfur cycling, carbon fixation and fermentation within anoxic basin waters. Taken together, filter size and in situ versus on-ship filtration had the largest impact on recovery of microbial groups with the potential to influence downstream metabolic reconstruction and process rate measurements. These observations highlight the need for establishing standardized and reproducible techniques that facilitate cross-scale comparisons and more accurately assess in situ activities of microbial communities.
    Description: This work was performed under the auspices of the Scientific Committee on Oceanographic Research (SCOR), the United States Department of Energy (DOE) Joint Genome Institute, an Office of Science User Facility, supported by the Office of Science of the United States Department of Energy under Contract DE-AC02- 05CH11231, the G. Unger Vetlesen and Ambrose Monell Foundations, the Tula Foundation-funded Centre for Microbial Diversity and Evolution, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Genome British Columbia, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, and the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research through grants awarded to SH. McLane Research Laboratories and Connie Lovejoy contributed access to instrumentation for field work. Ship time support was provided by NSERC between 2007 and 2014 through grants awarded to SC, SH and Philippe Tortell MT-B was funded by Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACyT) and the Tula Foundation.
    Keywords: microbial ecology ; oxygen minimum zone ; standards of practice ; filtration methods ; amplicon sequencing
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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