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  • 2020-2024  (39,868)
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  • 1
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    Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). Contact: bco-dmo-data@whoi.edu
    Publication Date: 2022-12-31
    Description: Dataset: BASIN 2019 Sediment properties
    Description: Sediments were collected in Fall 2019 across three transects in the Santa Barbara Basin using the ROV Jason during R/V Atlantis cruise AT42-19. This dataset consists of the sediment parameters porosity and density. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/867113
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1829981, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1830033
    Description: 2022-12-31
    Keywords: Santa Barbara Basin ; Sediments ; Density ; Porosity
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Dataset
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-12-31
    Description: Dataset: Acer Fecundity Gamete Bundles
    Description: As a secondary assessment of fecundity, colonies of Acropora cerviconis (various genets) were taken to Mote Marine Laboratory in August 2020 for spawning and ex situ assisted sexual reproduction. From genets that spawned, forty random gamete bundles were collected during spawning and the total number of eggs and sperm per bundle were quantified. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/868493
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1452538
    Description: 2022-12-31
    Keywords: Coral ; Fecundity ; Spawning ; Gamete bundle
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 3
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    Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). Contact: bco-dmo-data@whoi.edu
    Publication Date: 2022-12-31
    Description: Dataset: BASIN 2019 Porewater geochemistry
    Description: Sediments were collected in Fall 2019 across three transects in the Santa Barbara Basin using the ROV Jason during R/V Atlantis cruise AT42-19. Porewater was separated from the sediments and geochemical properties measured. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/867007
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1829981, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1830033
    Description: 2022-12-31
    Keywords: Santa Barbara Basin ; Sediments ; Porewater ; Geochemistry
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Dataset
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  • 4
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    Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). Contact: bco-dmo-data@whoi.edu
    Publication Date: 2022-12-31
    Description: Dataset: BASIN 2019 Microbial activity
    Description: Sediments were collected in Fall 2019 across three transects in the Santa Barbara Basin using the ROV Jason during R/V Atlantis cruise AT42-19. Microbial activity in the sediments was determined by measuring sulfate reduction rates. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/867221
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1829981, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1830033
    Description: 2022-12-31
    Keywords: Santa Barbara Basin ; Sediments ; Sulfate reduction
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 5
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    Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). Contact: bco-dmo-data@whoi.edu
    Publication Date: 2022-12-31
    Description: Dataset: Acer Fecundity Polpys per Area
    Description: Primary fecundity was assessed for Acropora cervicornis corals with known disease susceptibility. This dataset presents information on the number of polyps per area from linear branches of five colonies with 12 genets held in Mote Marine Lab’s spawning nurseries. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/868308
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1452538
    Description: 2022-12-31
    Keywords: Coral ; Fecundity ; Polyps
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Dataset
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  • 6
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    Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). Contact: bco-dmo-data@whoi.edu
    Publication Date: 2022-12-31
    Description: Dataset: Acer Fecundity Oocyte Size
    Description: Primary fecundity was assessed for Acropora cervicornis corals with known disease susceptibility. This dataset presents information on oocyte sizes from dissections of coral polyps from five adult colonies containing 12 genets held in Mote Marine Lab’s spawning nurseries. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/843067
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1452538
    Description: 2022-12-31
    Keywords: Coral ; Fecundity ; Oocyte ; Reproduction
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 7
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    Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). Contact: bco-dmo-data@whoi.edu
    Publication Date: 2022-12-31
    Description: Dataset: Acropora hyacinthus ITS2 amplicon sequencing
    Description: This dataset represents ITS2 amplicon sequences from Acropora hyacinthus samples collected at mutliple timepoints in Moorea, French Polynesia after the mass bleaching event of 2019. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/876564
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1935308, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1935305
    Description: 2022-12-31
    Keywords: Coral bleaching ; Acropora hyacinthus ; Moorea
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 8
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    Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). Contact: bco-dmo-data@whoi.edu
    Publication Date: 2022-12-31
    Description: Dataset: Acer Fecundity Oocyte Number
    Description: Primary fecundity was assessed for Acropora cervicornis corals with known disease susceptibility. This dataset presents oocyte numbers from dissections of coral polyps from five adult colonies from 12 genets held in Mote Marine Lab’s spawning nurseries. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/867314
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1452538
    Description: 2022-12-31
    Keywords: Coral ; Fecundity ; Oocyte ; Reproduction
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 9
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    Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). Contact: bco-dmo-data@whoi.edu
    Publication Date: 2023-01-03
    Description: Dataset: Upper-pelagic particle numbers from imagery in the Sargasso Sea and in the Gulf of Trieste
    Description: This dataset represents Log10-particle numbers per volume versus log10-particle size bins at various threshold levels of the image analysis program taken between 4 and 7-meter depth in the Sargasso Sea and the Gulf of Trieste on July 18, 2021. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/884596
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-2128438
    Keywords: particle numbers ; shadowgraph imaging ; aquatic gels
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-01-03
    Description: Dataset: Carbonate chemistry
    Description: Carbonate chemistry data collected as part of a study of the "Community context and pCO2 impact the transcriptome of the "helper" bacterium Alteromonas in co-culture with picocyanobacteria" (Barreto Filho et al., 2022). The following results abstract describes these data along with related datasets which can be accessed from the "Related Datasets" section of this page. Many microbial photoautotrophs depend on heterotrophic bacteria for accomplishing essential functions. Environmental changes, however, could alter or eliminate such interactions. We investigated the effects of changing pCO2 on gene expression in co-cultures of 3 strains of picocyanobacteria (Synechococcus strains CC9311 and WH8102 and Prochlorococcus strain MIT9312) paired with the ‘helper’ bacterium Alteromonas macleodii EZ55. Co-culture with cyanobacteria resulted in a much higher number of up- and down-regulated genes in EZ55 than pCO2 by itself. Pathway analysis revealed significantly different expression of genes involved in carbohydrate metabolism, stress response, and chemotaxis, with different patterns of up- or down-regulation in co-culture with different cyanobacterial strains. Gene expression patterns of organic and inorganic nutrient transporter and catabolism genes in EZ55 suggested resources available in the culture media were altered under elevated (800 ppm) pCO2 conditions. Altogether, changing expression patterns were consistent with the possibility that the composition of cyanobacterial excretions changed under the two pCO2 regimes, causing extensive ecophysiological changes in both members of the co-cultures. Additionally, significant downregulation of oxidative stress genes inMIT9312/EZ55 cocultures at 800 ppm pCO2 were consistent with a link between the predicted reduced availability of photorespiratory byproducts (i.e., glycolate/2PG) under this condition and observed reductions in internal oxidative stress loads for EZ55, providing a possible explanation for the previously observed lack of “help” provided by EZ55 to MIT9312 under elevated pCO2. The data stored in this archive permit the recalculation of the pH measurements shown in Table 1 of the results publication Barreto Filho et al. (2022). For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/883120
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1851085
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2023-01-11
    Description: Dataset: Results of risk-addition experiment (juvenile oyster condition index)
    Description: The eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is a foundation species in northeast Florida estuaries, including the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (GTMNERR), where intertidal reefs are extensive. Estuarine research to assess the sustainability of oyster populations, plus various monitoring studies and oyster reef restoration projects have been undertaken, with an additional focus on testing theory regarding the effects of predation risk in the natural environment. As part of a study that manipulatively “pressed” risk cues onto oyster prey, a field experiment was conducted on oyster reefs in the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida) from June to November 2012. Three sites within the southern areas of the GTM NERR (south of Matanzas inlet) were used in the experiment: Summer Island North (SIN), Marine Land (ML), and Pellicer Flats (PF). The SIN site occurred closest to the inlet (farthest from freshwater input), the PF site occurred farthest from the inlet and closest to freshwater input, while the ML site occurs between the inlet and the freshwater input. Oyster survival, growth, and recruitment were checked monthly. At the midpoint and conclusion of the experiment, individual oysters were also destructively sampled to quantify differences in oyster traits (shell versus tissue mass) as a function of experimental treatment and location. This submission concerns the traits of juvenile oysters approximately one month after the initiation of the experiment. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/885817
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1736943, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1820540
    Keywords: Predation risk ; Comparative experimental approach ; phenotype ; nonconsumptive effect
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2023-01-11
    Description: Dataset: Results of risk-addition experiment (adult oyster survival)
    Description: The eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is a foundation species in northeast Florida estuaries, including the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (GTMNERR), where intertidal reefs are extensive. Estuarine research to assess sustainability and oyster population, plus various monitoring studies and oyster reef restoration projects have been undertaken, with an additional focus on testing theory regarding the effects of predation risk in the natural environment. As part of a study that manipulatively “pressed” risk cues onto oyster prey, a field experiment was conducted on oyster reefs in the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida) from June to November 2012. Three areas within the southern areas of the GTM NERR (south of Matanzas inlet) were used in the experiment: Summer Island North (SIN), Marine Land (ML) and Pellicer Flats (PF). The SIN site occurred closest to the inlet (farthest from freshwater input), the PF site occurred farthest from inlet and closest to freshwater input, while the ML site occurs between the inlet and the freshwater input. Oyster survival, growth and recruitment were checked monthly. At the mid point and conclusion of the experiment, individual oysters were also destructively sampled to quantify differences in oyster traits (shell versus tissue mass) as a function of experimental treatment and location. This submission concerns the survival of adult oysters. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/884130
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1736943, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1820540
    Keywords: Eastern oyster ; phenotype ; traits ; fitness ; Predation risk ; nonconsumptive effect
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2023-01-11
    Description: Dataset: Results of risk-addition experiment (juvenile oyster growth)
    Description: The eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is a foundation species in northeast Florida estuaries, including the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (GTMNERR), where intertidal reefs are extensive. Estuarine research to assess sustainability and oyster population, plus various monitoring studies and oyster reef restoration projects have been undertaken, with an additional focus on testing theory regarding the effects of predation risk in the natural environment. As part of a study that manipulatively “pressed” risk cues onto oyster prey, a field experiment was conducted on oyster reefs in the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida) from June to November 2012. Three areas within the southern areas of the GTM NERR (south of Matanzas inlet) were used in the experiment: Summer Island North (SIN), Marine Land (ML) and Pellicer Flats (PF). The SIN site occurred closest to the inlet (farthest from freshwater input), the PF site occurred farthest from inlet and closest to freshwater input, while the ML site occurs between the inlet and the freshwater input. Oyster survival, growth and recruitment were checked monthly. At the mid point and conclusion of the experiment, individual oysters were also destructively sampled to quantify differences in oyster traits (shell versus tissue mass) as a function of experimental treatment and location. This submission concerns the growth of juvenile oysters. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/885493
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1736943, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1820540
    Keywords: Growth increment ; Predation risk ; environmental gradients ; nonconsumptive effect
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2023-01-11
    Description: Dataset: Results of risk-addition experiment (juvenile oyster survival)
    Description: The eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is a foundation species in northeast Florida estuaries, including the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (GTMNERR), where intertidal reefs are extensive. Estuarine research to assess sustainability and oyster population, plus various monitoring studies and oyster reef restoration projects have been undertaken, with an additional focus on testing theory regarding the effects of predation risk in the natural environment. As part of a study that manipulatively “pressed” risk cues onto oyster prey, a field experiment was conducted on oyster reefs in the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida) from June to November 2012. Three areas within the southern areas of the GTM NERR (south of Matanzas inlet) were used in the experiment: Summer Island North (SIN), Marine Land (ML), and Pellicer Flats (PF). The SIN site occurred closest to the inlet (farthest from freshwater input), the PF site occurred farthest from the inlet and closest to freshwater input, and the ML site occurs between the inlet and the freshwater input. Oyster survival, growth, and recruitment were checked monthly. At the midpoint and conclusion of the experiment, individual oysters were also destructively sampled to quantify differences in oyster traits (shell versus tissue mass) as a function of experimental treatment and location. This submission concerns the survival of juvenile oysters. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/885259
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1736943, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1820540
    Keywords: Predation risk ; nonconsumptive effect ; vital rate
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2023-01-11
    Description: Dataset: Results of risk-addition experiment (oyster recruitment)
    Description: The eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is a foundation species in northeast Florida estuaries, including the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (GTMNERR), where intertidal reefs are extensive. Estuarine research to assess sustainability of oyster populations, plus various monitoring studies and oyster reef restoration projects have been undertaken, with an additional focus on testing theory regarding the effects of predation risk in the natural environment. As part of a study that manipulatively “pressed” risk cues onto oyster prey, a field experiment was conducted on oyster reefs in the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida) from June to November 2012. Three areas within the southern areas of the GTM NERR (south of Matanzas inlet) were used in the experiment: Summer Island North (SIN), Marine Land (ML) and Pellicer Flats (PF). The SIN site occurred closest to the inlet (farthest from freshwater input), the PF site occurred farthest from inlet and closest to freshwater input, while the ML site occurs between the inlet and the freshwater input. Oyster survival, growth and recruitment were checked monthly. At the mid point and conclusion of the experiment, individual oysters were also destructively sampled to quantify differences in oyster traits (shell versus tissue mass) as a function of experimental treatment and location. This submission concerns the recruitment of larval oysters to the experimental treatments. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/885720
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1736943, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1820540
    Keywords: Predation risk ; larval recruitment ; nonconsumptive effect
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2023-01-11
    Description: Dataset: Results of risk-addition experiment (adult oyster condition index)
    Description: The eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is a foundation species in northeast Florida estuaries, including the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (GTMNERR), where intertidal reefs are extensive. Estuarine research to assess sustainability and oyster population, plus various monitoring studies and oyster reef restoration projects have been undertaken, with an additional focus on testing theory regarding the effects of predation risk in the natural environment. As part of a study that manipulatively “pressed” risk cues onto oyster prey, a field experiment was conducted on oyster reefs in the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida) from June to November 2012. Three areas within the southern areas of the GTM NERR (south of Matanzas inlet) were used in the experiment: Summer Island North (SIN), Marine Land (ML) and Pellicer Flats (PF). The SIN site occurred closest to the inlet (farthest from freshwater input), the PF site occurred farthest from inlet and closest to freshwater input, while the ML site occurs between the inlet and the freshwater input. Oyster survival, growth and recruitment were checked monthly. At the mid point and conclusion of the experiment, individual oysters were also destructively sampled to quantify differences in oyster traits (shell versus tissue mass) as a function of experimental treatment and location. This submission concerns the condition index of adult oysters. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/885078
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1736943, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1820540
    Keywords: Oyster ; phenotype ; Predation risk ; fitness ; nonconsumptive effect
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2023-01-11
    Description: Dataset: Results of risk-addition experiment (adult oyster growth)
    Description: The eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) is a foundation species in northeast Florida estuaries, including the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (GTMNERR), where intertidal reefs are extensive. Estuarine research to assess sustainability and oyster population, plus various monitoring studies and oyster reef restoration projects have been undertaken, with an additional focus on testing theory regarding the effects of predation risk in the natural environment. As part of a study that manipulatively “pressed” risk cues onto oyster prey, a field experiment was conducted on oyster reefs in the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve (Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida) from June to November 2012. Three areas within the southern areas of the GTM NERR (south of Matanzas inlet) were used in the experiment: Summer Island North (SIN), Marine Land (ML) and Pellicer Flats (PF). The SIN site occurred closest to the inlet (farthest from freshwater input), the PF site occurred farthest from inlet and closest to freshwater input, while the ML site occurs between the inlet and the freshwater input. Oyster survival, growth and recruitment were checked monthly. At the mid point and conclusion of the experiment, individual oysters were also destructively sampled to quantify differences in oyster traits (shell versus tissue mass) as a function of experimental treatment and location. This submission concerns the growth of adult oysters. For a complete list of measurements, refer to the full dataset description in the supplemental file 'Dataset_description.pdf'. The most current version of this dataset is available at: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/884362
    Description: NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1736943, NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) OCE-1820540
    Keywords: growth ; Predation risk ; nonconsumptive effect
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  • 18
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    In:  EPIC323th International Conference on Vibration Problems, Zurich, Switzerland, 2021-01-14-2021-01-15
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Finding the optimal structural design to avoid resonance by shifting eigenfrequencies out of the range of external frequencies has been a goal for decades. Biological structures, such as diatom shells, obtain an overall shape adaptation similar to their mode shapes, which might lead to improved vibration characteristics. The aim of this study was to investigate the eigenfrequency increases of a 1D Bernoulli beam, a 2D Kirchhoff plate and a 3D Timoshenko beam by pre-deforming the structures according to the corresponding mode shapes. Besides the maximisation of single eigenfrequencies, also the simultaneous increase of other eigenfrequencies were analysed. The results showed that the eigenfrequencies can be strongly increased by shaping the structures according to the corresponding mode shapes. Small pre-deformations led already to high eigenfrequency increases. In conclusion, the investigated, easy applicable method allowed a strong eigenfrequency increase by performing only small structural deformations without additional weight increase.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) plays a crucial role in global ocean circulation by fostering deep-water upwelling and formation of new water masses. On geological timescales, ACC variations are poorly constrained beyond the last glacial. Here, we reconstruct changes in ACC strength in the central Drake Passage in vicinity of the modern Polar Front over a complete glacial-interglacial cycle (i.e., the past 140,000 years), based on sediment grain-size and geochemical characteristics. We found significant glacial-interglacial changes of ACC flow speed, with weakened current strength during glacials and a stronger circulation in interglacials. Superimposed on these orbital-scale changes are high-amplitude millennialscale fluctuations, with ACC strength maxima correlating with diatom-based Antarctic winter sea-ice minima, particularly during full glacial conditions. We infer that the ACC is closely linked to Southern Hemisphere millennial-scale climate oscillations, amplified through Antarctic sea ice extent changes. These strong ACC variations modulated Pacific-Atlantic water exchange via the “cold water route” and potentially affected the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and marine carbon storage.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 20
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    In:  EPIC3The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 149(6), pp. 4649-4658, ISSN: 0001-4966
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The Fram Strait between Greenland and Spitsbergen is the only deep-water connection between the Arctic Ocean and its surrounding water bodies. Here, the WSC (West Spitsbergen Current) transports warm Atlantic Water into the Arctic, which accounts for a major part of the warming trend measured there in the past. The northern part of the Fram Strait is strongly influenced by the MIZ (Marginal Ice Zone), which causes a stratification of the water column that retains nutrients at the surface. These sustain intense algal blooms, leading to high abundances of zooplankton, linking the primary production and higher trophic levels. Changes in the position of the MIZ and the timing of the algae blooms might affect the zooplankton community and thus the entire Arctic food chain. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of the ice edge on the zooplankton community in the Fram Strait. Zooplankton samples were taken at the northern (ice influenced) stations N4/5 and the southern (ice-free) station S3 of the Long-Term Ecological Research Observatory HAUSGARTEN established by the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) in the Fram Strait in 1999. MultiNet samples of both stations were collected in 6 years. For 2015, 2017 and 2018, samples covered a depth of 1,000 m with 4 depth intervals (0-50-200-500-1,000 m). Additionally, surface samples (0-50 m) from 2011, 2012 and 2016 were added to the analysis. CTD data and ice parameters were included to test for correlations between species occurrences and the shifting ice edge. It was hypothesized 1) that the plankton community differs between the northern stations N4/5 and the southern station S3, 2) that these differences are caused by the influence of the ice edge and 3) that interannual differences are stronger at N4/5 due to the shifting ice edge. Furthermore, the zooplankton camera LOKI (Lightframe On-sight Key species Investigation) was deployed at S3 in 2017. This approach offers continuous abundance data combined with simultaneously measured environmental parameters and thus allows a closer insight into small-scale zooplankton distributions. Here, it is hypothesized 4) that the results of the LOKI and the MultiNet will differ regarding zooplankton abundance and community composition. An ANOSIM revealed sampling depth to be the only significant factor for differences between samples. Year and location both tested insignificant. While the northern station showed a higher interannual variability of environmental parameters than the southern station, this was not reflected in the zooplankton communities. It is likely that the WSC which transports Atlantic species northwards is the major factor determining the community composition while the influence of the ice edge is minor. Abundances ranged from 4,500 ind.m-3 at the surface level (0-50 m) at N5 in 2015 to almost 14,000 ind.m-3 at the surface at N4 in 2018, with copepods being the most abundant taxon in all samples. While overall abundances were higher at the surface, the number of taxa increased with depth. In general, there was no trend with time or location. However, in 2017 and 2018 large blooms of the appendicularian Fritillaria sp. were found, especially at the northern station. These might be an indicator of warmer temperatures and an increasing borealization of the Arctic. The LOKI and MultiNet hauls compared at station S3 in 2017 showed differences regarding species abundances, with the LOKI often recording only a fraction of what was found in the MultiNet data. This disparity was mostly accounted for by copepods of the genus Oithona, whose translucent bodies were not well captured by the LOKI. On the other hand, the high vertical resolution of the LOKI allowed to detect a close correlation of Metridia longa to Atlantic Water and a niche separation of developmental stages of M. longa with only females and CV performing a diel vertical migration. These results, while not finding a statistically significant difference between the northern stations N4/5 and the southern station S3, illustrate the importance of time series stations in indicator regions such as the Fram Strait in order to monitor climate change processes.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 22
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    In:  EPIC3Progress In Oceanography, PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD, 203(102776), ISSN: 0079-6611
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Larval dispersal is a fundamental process responsible for colonization and connectivity of benthic invertebrate populations. It is difficult to study larval dispersal in polar environments because weather and climate conditions restrict sample collection to certain seasons. In this study, we leveraged oceanographic moorings as long-term scientific platforms for collecting larvae and recruits of benthic invertebrate species in the Fram Strait and along the continental slope north of Svalbard in 2017–2021. Larval traps and fouling panels were deployed at various depths on 15 moorings at 8 locations, and additional specimens of biofouling were obtained opportunistically from moored instruments. Our results showed a significant difference in species composition between samples collected in Atlantic Water in the West Spitsbergen Current (WSC) and samples collected in Arctic Water near the seafloor and in the East Greenland Current (EGC) in the western part of the Fram Strait. There was also a stark difference between Atlantic Water species in the Fram Strait and on the north Svalbard slope. Most specimens collected in the WSC belonged to species with long-duration planktotrophic larvae, such as the ubiquitous bivalve Hiatella arctica, the bryozoan Alcyonidium mamillatum, and two nudibranchs. Samplers exposed primarily to Arctic water at their given depth and location were dominated by hydrozoans. We observed medusae budding off of the hydroids Stegopoma plicatile and Rhizoragium roseum. Our study demonstrates that the WSC is an important vector for larval dispersal into the central Arctic Ocean. Integration of biological samplers on oceanographic moorings holds great promise for monitoring efforts as climate change progresses, especially in environments where research is challenging and seasonally limited, such as the Arctic. 1. Introduction For benthic invertebrates, especially those with sessile adult stages (e.g., sponges, anemones), larval dispersal is the primary mechanism of dispersal to new habitats (Pechenik, 1999). The patterns and mechanisms of larval dispersal are difficult to study in the Arctic Ocean, where weather and climate conditions restrict sample collection to summer months. As a result, larval dispersal and the subsequent processes of settlement and recruitment in benthic invertebrates are poorly understood in the Arctic Ocean, despite their importance. Oceanographic moorings provide excellent platforms for studying larval dispersal, recruitment, and growth of organisms (Chava et al., 2021; Schiaparelli and Aliani, 2019). Instruments and floats on a mooring are deployed in the water column by design, so the
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Humpback whale males are known to sing on their low-latitude breeding grounds, but it is well established that songs are also commonly produced ‘off-season’ on the feeding grounds or during migration. This opens exciting opportunities to investigate migratory aggregations, study humpback whale behavioral plasticity and potentially even assign individual singers to specific breeding grounds. In this study, we analyzed passive acoustic data from 13 recording positions and multiple years (2011–2018) within the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean (ASSO). Humpback whale song was detected at nine recording positions in five years. Most songs were recorded in May, austral fall, coinciding with the rapid increase in sea ice concentration at most recording positions. The spatio-temporal pattern in humpback whale singing activity on Southern Ocean feeding grounds is most likely shaped by local prey availability and humpback whale migratory strategies. Furthermore, the comparative analyses of song structures clearly show a differentiation of two song groups, of which one was solely recorded at the western edge of the ASSO and the other song group was recorded throughout the ASSO. This new finding suggests a common feeding ground occupation by multiple humpback whale populations in the ASSO, allowing for cultural and potentially even genetic exchange among populations.
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: In this master thesis, Raman Lidar data from Ny-Å?lesund, Spitsbergen have beenanalysed for January to April 2019. Optical parameters (the aerosol backscatter at532 nm, the depolarisation ratio at 532 nm, the color ratio and the Lidar ratio at 355nm) and their typical values have been presented per height interval and per month,as well as the differences between those. Also, the links between the different opticalparameters have been investigated and those values were compared with values ofMarch 2018. March 2019 showed lower backscatter and higher depolarisation ratios,indicating fewer and more spherical particles as in March 2018. For January the 28thand February the 06th, hygroscopic growth has been determined. Relative humiditydata measured by radiosondes have been investigated for strong gradients andbackscatter data has been plotted against the relative humidity. The parametrizationof the scattering enhancement factor (f(RH) = (1??RH)????) has been used to plotgrowth curves through the backscatter data and optimal values for??have beenfound. For the 28th of January, the calculated??-values ranged from 0.3 to 1.4 andthe most likely value appeared to be 0.64. Growth factors (g(RH)) and??-valueshave been calculated as well based onin situ(PM10-filter) data using the Zdanovskii-Stokes-Robinson relation. The resulting??-values for January the 28th and Februarythe 6th were respectively 0.98 and 0.73. For the 19th of January, a general overviewof the aerosol situation on that day has been presented using different results fromdifferent techniques. Mostly small sized aerosol particles (14〈D〈300 nm) havebeen found for that day and low depolarisation values were measured, indicating thepresence of small, spherical ammonium sulfate species. Further research combiningLidar andin situdata is needed for making more precise and accurate conclusions considering Arctic aerosols.
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: In this work, we analysed aerosol measurements from lidar and PM10 samples around the European Arctic site of Ny-Ålesund during late winter–early spring 2019. Lidar observations above 700 m revealed time-independent values for the aerosol backscatter coefficient (ββ), colour ratio (CR), linear particle depolarisation ratio (δδ) and lidar ratio (LR) from January to April. In contrast to previous years, in 2019 the early springtime backscatter increase in the troposphere, linked to Arctic haze, was not observed. In situ nss-sulphate (nss-SO2−4) concentration was measured both at a coastal (Gruvebadet) and a mountain (Zeppelin) station, a few kilometres apart. As we employed different measurement techniques at sites embedded in complex orography, we investigated their agreement. From the lidar perspective, the aerosol load (indicated by ββ) above 700 m changed by less than a factor of 3.5. On the contrary, the daily nss-SO2−4 concentration erratically changed by a factor of 25 (from 0.1 to 2.5 ng m−3) both at Gruvebadet and Zeppelin station, with the latter mostly lying above the boundary layer. Moreover, daily nss-SO2−4 concentration was remarkably variable (correlation about 0.7 between the sites), despite its long-range origin. However, on a seasonal average basis the in situ sites agreed very well. Therefore, it can be argued that nss-SO2−4 advection mainly takes place in the lowest free troposphere, while under complex orography it is mixed downwards by local boundary layer processes. Our study suggests that at Arctic sites with complex orography ground-based aerosol properties show higher temporal variability compared to the free troposphere. This implies that the comparison between remote sensing and in situ observations might be more reasonable on longer time scales, i.e., monthly and seasonal basis even for nearby sites.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: 〈jats:p〉High-accumulation sites are crucial for understanding the patterns and mechanisms of climate and environmental change in Antarctica since they allow gaining high-resolution proxy records from firn and ice. Here, we present new glacio- and isotope-geochemical data at sub-annual resolution from a firn core retrieved from an ice cap on Plateau Laclavere (LCL), northern Antarctic Peninsula, covering the period 2012–2015. The signals of two volcanic eruptions and two forest fire events in South America could be identified in the non-sea-salt sulphur and black carbon records, respectively. Mean annual snow accumulation on LCL amounts to 2500 kg m−2 a−1 and exhibits low inter-annual variability. Time series of δ18O, δD and d excess show no seasonal cyclicity, which may result from (1) a reduced annual temperature amplitude due to the maritime climate and (2) post-depositional processes. The firn core stratigraphy indicates strong surface melt on LCL during austral summers 2013 and 2015, likely related to large-scale warm-air advection from lower latitudes and temporal variations in sea ice extent in the Bellingshausen-Amundsen Sea. The LCL ice cap is a highly valuable natural archive since it captures regional meteorological and environmental signals as well as their connection to the South American continent.〈/jats:p〉
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Phytoplankton in the sunlit layer of the ocean act as the base of the marine food web fueling fisheries, and also regulate key biogeochemical processes. Phytoplankton composition structure varies in ocean biomes and different phytoplankton groups drive differently the marine ecosystem and biogeochemical processes. Because of this, variations in phytoplankton composition influence the entire ocean environment, specifically the ocean energy transfer and the export of organic carbon to the deep ocean. As one of the algorithms deriving phytoplankton composition from space borne data, within the framework of the EU Copernicus Marine Service (CMEMS), EOF-PFT algorithm was developed using multi-spectral satellite data collocated to an extensive in-situ PFT data set based on HPLC pigments and sea surface temperature data (Xi et al. 2020, 2021; https://marine.copernicus.eu/). By using multi-sensor merged products and Sentinel-3 OLCI data, the algorithm provides global chlorophyll a data with per-pixel uncertainty for diatoms, haptophytes, dinoflagellates, chlorophytes and prokaryotic phytoplankton spanning the period from 2002 until today. Due to different lifespans and radiometric characteristics of the ocean color sensors, the consistency of the PFTs is evaluated to provide quality-assured data for a consistent long-term monitoring of the phytoplankton community structure. As current commonly used phytoplankton carbon estimation methods rely mostly on the backscattering property of phytoplankton, which could vary dramatically for different phytoplankton taxa, as a perspective of this study, phytoplankton carbon may be better estimated in a way that accounts for phytoplankton taxonomy.
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The year 2021 set new records for wildfire extent in the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) in eastern Siberia, Russia. Wildfire seasons in this unique region, characterized by its deciduous boreal forest and permafrost landforms, are becoming more intense. Some fires are threatening local communities, while their smoke covers vast stretches of land every summer, posing health risks to people even in the distance. At the same time, the larch trees of the eastern Siberian boreal forest stabilize the permafrost soils below as guardians of a continental-scale storage of terrestrial carbon. It is still largely unknown how the current trend of wildfire intensification will develop in the future, and how it will modify the structure of the boreal forests within the next decades to centuries. However, even though needed for a well-founded evaluation of long-term impacts of changing fire regimes, data on past trends of wildfire activity still remains scarce in eastern Siberia. Here, we present a new reconstruction of boreal fire and vegetation dynamics, spanning the last ca. 10.8 ka. Continuously analyzed macroscopic charcoal particles and a REVEALS-transformed pollen record from a sediment core from Lake Satagay (N 63.078, E 117.998) give insight into long-term trends and relationships between changes in fire regime and vegetation composition and coverage. The data indicates that modern larch-dominated forests co-exist with a lower severity fire regime, whereas early Holocene open larch-birch woodlands enabled increased charcoal accumulation and thus supported a higher severity fire regime. Considering the expected increase in tree mortality caused by wildfires and insect damage, likely to thin out currently denser tree stands, this fire-vegetation relationship suggests a potential upcoming positive feedback on intensifying fire regimes.
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Iodine has a significant impact on promoting the formation of new ultrafine aerosol particles and accelerating tropospheric ozone loss, thereby affecting radiative forcing and climate. Therefore, understanding the long-term natural evolution of iodine, and its coupling with climate variability, is key to adequately assess its effect on climate on centennial to millennial timescales. Here, using two Greenland ice cores (NEEM and RECAP), we report the Arctic iodine variability during the last 127,000 years. We find the highest and lowest iodine levels recorded during interglacial and glacial periods, respectively, modulated by ocean bioproductivity and sea ice dynamics. Our sub-decadal resolution measurements reveal that high frequency iodine emission variability occurred in pace with Dansgaard/Oeschger events, highlighting the rapid Arctic ocean-ice-atmosphere iodine exchange response to abrupt climate changes. Finally, we discuss if iodine levels during past warmer-than-present climate phases can serve as analogues of future scenarios under an expected ice-free Arctic Ocean. We argue that the combination of natural biogenic ocean iodine release (boosted by ongoing Arctic warming and sea ice retreat) and anthropogenic ozone-induced iodine emissions may lead to a near future scenario with the highest iodine levels of the last 127,000 years.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Solar light/dark cycles and seasonal photoperiods underpin daily and annual rhythms of life on Earth. Yet, the Arctic is characterized by severalmonths of permanent illumination (‘‘midnight sun’’). To determine the persistence of 24h rhythms during the midnight sun, we investigated transcriptomic dynamics in the copepod Calanus finmarchicus during the summer solstice period in the Arctic, with the lowest diel oscillation and the highest altitude of the sun’s position. Here we reveal that in these extreme photic conditions, a widely rhythmic daily transcriptome exists, showing that very weak solar cues are sufficient to entrain organisms. Furthermore, at extremely high latitudes and under sea-ice, gene oscillations become re-organized to include 〈24h rhythms. Environmental synchronization may therefore be modulated to include non-photic signals (i.e. tidal cycles). The ability of zooplankton to be synchronized by extremely weak diel and potentially tidal cycles, may confer an adaptive temporal reorganization of biological processes at high latitudes.
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Phytoplankton in the sunlit layer of the ocean act as the base of the marine food web fueling fisheries, and also regulate key biogeochemical processes such as exporting carbon to the deep ocean. Phytoplankton composition structure varies in ocean biomes and different phytoplankton groups drive differently the marine ecosystem. As one of the algorithms deriving phytoplankton composition from space borne data, within the framework of the EU Copernicus Marine Service (CMEMS), OLCI-PFT algorithm was developed using multi-spectral satellite data collocated to an extensive in-situ PFT data set based on HPLC pigments and sea surface temperature data (Xi et al. 2020, 2021). It provides global PFT retrievals including chlorophyll a estimations of diatoms, haptophytes, dinoflagellates, chlorophytes and prokaryotic phytoplankton spanning the period from 2002 until today, by using multi-sensor merged products and OLCI data. These PFT products with per-pixel uncertainty are publicly available on the CMEMS. Due to different lifespans and radiometric characteristics of the ocean color sensors, it is crucial to evaluate the CMEMS PFT products to provide quality-assured data for a consistent long-term monitoring of the phytoplankton community structure. In this study, using in-situ phytoplankton data (HPLC pigment data further evaluated with microscopic, flow cytometry, molecular and hyperspectral optical data) collected from expeditions since 2009 in the tropical, temperate and polar (mainly Fram Strait within the PEBCAO network) regions, we aim to 1) validate the CMEMS PFT products and investigate the continuity of the PFTs data derived from different satellites, and 2) deliver two-decade consistent PFT products for times series analysis. For the latter we determine inter-annual trends and variation of the surface phytoplankton community structure targeting some key sub-regions (e.g.,east Fram Strait) that have been observed being influenced by the changing marine environment.
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  • 32
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    Unknown
    University of Bremen
    In:  EPIC3University of Bremen, 63 p.
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The variability of the climate system is majorly impacted by the air-sea interaction. Climate model simulations for the past, present, and future provide an estimate of climate variability and climate change. This study investigates the response of the Ocean to the wind stress engendered changes in the North Atlantic region. Feedback in the complex climate system is however not fully explored yet. Partially coupled experiments with fixed wind stress provide an excellent test of wind-stress feedback in the climate system. The focus is on the behavior of the variability using a partial coupling method to constrain the Ocean with prescribed wind forcing in an otherwise fully coupled Earth system model. This enables the assessment of the direct oceanic and the indirect atmospheric response to idealized forced scenarios of prescribed winds over the North Atlantic region. A partially coupled model as used in this study is a model in which the Ocean and Sea-Ice component has been forced by prescribed wind stress which drives the said component with inherent climatological wind field as the fully coupled model. While I discuss major climate variability mechanisms, we focus on four principal modes of climate variability related to the dynamics of Earth’s Oceans as they react to wind stress forcing: the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) and Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC). These Principal oscillation modes are of broad interest and considerable importance in understanding the climate trend and dynamics. These variability mechanisms are examined using the partially coupled climate model with the fully coupled model as the reference source. The results show that there is negative feedback from the Ocean as the interactive wind stress dampens the examined variability indices. Also, the Sea Surface temperature increases Southward and decreases Northward in the partially coupled simulations (the reverse is the case for the fully coupled simulations) as a link between wind stress and heat transport is established.
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  • 33
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  EPIC3Frontiers in Marine Science, 9(933768), ISSN: 2296-7745
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Floating marine debris is ubiquitous in marine environments but knowledge about quantities in remote regions is still limited. Here, we present the results of an extensive survey of floating marine debris by experts, trained scientists from fields other than pollution or non-professional citizen scientists. A total of 276 visual ship-based surveys were conducted between 2015 and 2020 in the Northeast (NE) Atlantic from waters off the Iberian Peninsula to the Central Arctic, however, with a focus on Arctic waters. Spatiotemporal variations among regional seas (Central Arctic, Barents Sea, Greenland Sea, Norwegian Sea, North Sea) and oceanic regions (Arctic waters and the temperate NE Atlantic) were explored. The overall median debris concentration was 11 items km-2, with considerable variability. The median concentration was highest in the North Sea with 19 items km-2. The Nordic seas, except the Central Arctic showed median concentrations ranging from 9 to 13 items km-2. Plastic accounted for 91% of all floating items. Miscellaneous fragments, films, ropes and nets, packaging materials, expanded polystyrene and straps were the most frequently observed plastic types. Although the median debris concentration in the Central Arctic was zero, this region was not entirely free of floating debris. The variations between regional seas and oceanic regions were statistically not significant indicating a continuous supply by a northward transportation of floating debris. The data show a slight annual decrease and clear seasonal differences in debris concentrations with higher levels observed during summer. A correlation between debris concentrations and environmental and spatial variables was found, explaining partly the variability in the observations. Pollution levels were 500 times lower than those recorded on the seafloor indicating the seafloor as a sink for marine debris. The Arctic was characterised by similar pollution levels as regions in temperate latitudes highlighting that Arctic ecosystems face threats from plastic pollution, which add to the effects of rapid climate change.
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 35
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    TU Ilmenau
    In:  EPIC3TU Ilmenau, 61 p.
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: This thesis deals with the analysis of return times of heat extremes in different climate scenarios. With the help of the coupled climate model AWI-ESM2.1, the historical climate since 1850 and the two future scenarios SSP1-2.6 and SSP5-8.5 are simulated. A small ensemble of simulations is calculated in each case. The daily maximum temperatures are analyzed using two methods from extreme value theory: the block maxima method and the peaks-over-threshold method. The average return times of different temperatures are calculated from the associated distribution functions. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov test shows that the data can be well described by both the generalized extreme value distribution (Weinbull distribution) and the Pareto distribution. However, due to the autocorrelation of the temperatures, the block maxima method proved to be more suitable for estimating the return times. The temperatures associated with a certain return time have already risen since the pre-industrial age and there is a strong dependence on the future scenario considered. In order to better understand the influence of the autocorrelation, the distribution of the return times for a constant temperature threshold is also examined. If the correlation is weak, as is the case in Germany, for example, the distribution can be described by an exponential function. In other places such as South America and Indonesia, the temperatures are more strongly correlated, the autocorrelation of the temperature differences to the average annual course initially falls off according to the power law. As a result, both very short and very long return times are becoming more frequent. An equation taken from the literature for the distribution of return times in long-term correlated systems is verified using the simulated daily maximum temperatures.
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Underwater images are used to explore and monitor ocean habitats, generating huge datasets with unusual data characteristics that preclude traditional data management strategies. Due to the lack of universally adopted data standards, image data collected from the marine environment are increasing in heterogeneity, preventing objective comparison. The extraction of actionable information thus remains challenging, particularly for researchers not directly involved with the image data collection. Standardized formats and procedures are needed to enable sustainable image analysis and processing tools, as are solutions for image publication in long-term repositories to ascertain reuse of data. The FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable) provide a framework for such data management goals. We propose the use of image FAIR Digital Objects (iFDOs) and present an infrastructure environment to create and exploit such FAIR digital objects. We show how these iFDOs can be created, validated, managed and stored, and which data associated with imagery should be curated. The goal is to reduce image management overheads while simultaneously creating visibility for image acquisition and publication efforts.
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  • 37
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    Unknown
    Springer Science and Business Media LLC
    In:  EPIC3Polar Biology, Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 45(6), pp. 971-985, ISSN: 0722-4060
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: A photographic seabed survey conducted off the Antarctic Peninsula region provided the opportunity to study spatial patterns, abundance and behaviour of the notothenioid benthic fish fauna. Overall, a total of 12,715 images taken with the Ocean Floor Observation System (OFOS) along 26 transects in three ecoregions (Joinville Island, Bransfield Strait and Drake Passage) were analysed. The fish fauna consisted of at least 34 species belonging to four families of both low-Antarctic and high-Antarctic origin. Nototheniids showed the highest relative abundance and species richness, followed by channichthyids, bathydraconids and artedidraconids. Direct in-situ observations in OFOS seabed images allowed descriptions of fish behaviour, such as aggregation of individuals (Notothenia coriiceps), specific body postures (Cygnodraco mawsoni and Cryodraco antarcticus) and parental care (Chaenodraco wilsoni, Chionodraco rastrospinosus, Pagetopsis macropterus and Trematomus hansoni). Fish density and species richness was primarily correlated with the occurrence of bryozoans, ascidians, and large cup-shaped sponges, providing a three-dimensional habitat suitable for fish settling, foraging, breeding and refuge from predators. Fish diversity was higher (a) off Joinville Island and in Bransfield Strait than in Drake Passage, where almost exclusively low-Antarctic species were recorded, and (b) between 100 and 600 m than at greater depths. Overall, the benthic fish fauna off the northern Antarctic Peninsula is zoogeographically composite and widespread, with well-structured spatial partitioning.
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  • 38
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    Frontiers Media SA
    In:  EPIC3Frontiers in Physiology, Frontiers Media SA, 13, pp. 809929-, ISSN: 1664-042X
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: 〈jats:p〉Climate change combined with anthropogenic stressors (e.g. overfishing, habitat destruction) may have particularly strong effects on threatened populations of coastal invertebrates. The collapse of the population of European lobster (〈jats:italic〉Homarus gammarus〈/jats:italic〉) around Helgoland constitutes a good example and prompted a large-scale restocking program. The question arises if recruitment of remaining natural individuals and program-released specimens could be stunted by ongoing climate change. We examined the joint effect of ocean warming and acidification on survival, development, morphology, energy metabolism and enzymatic antioxidant activity of the larval stages of the European lobster. Larvae from four independent hatches were reared from stage I to III under a gradient of 10 seawater temperatures (13–24°C) combined with moderate (∼470 µatm) and elevated (∼1160 µatm) seawater 〈jats:italic〉p〈/jats:italic〉CO〈jats:sub〉2〈/jats:sub〉 treatments. Those treatments correspond to the shared socio-economic pathways (SSP), SSP1-2.6 and SSP5-8.5 (i.e. the low and the very high greenhouse gas emissions respectively) projected for 2100 by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Larvae under the elevated 〈jats:italic〉p〈/jats:italic〉CO〈jats:sub〉2〈/jats:sub〉 treatment had not only lower survival rates, but also significantly smaller rostrum length. However, temperature was the main driver of energy demands with increased oxygen consumption rates and elemental C:N ratio towards warmer temperatures, with a reducing effect on development time. Using this large temperature gradient, we provide a more precise insight on the aerobic thermal window trade-offs of lobster larvae and whether exposure to the worst hypercapnia scenario may narrow it. This may have repercussions on the recruitment of the remaining natural and program-released specimens and thus, in the enhancement success of future lobster stocks.〈/jats:p〉
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Seasonal variations in day length and temperature, in combination with dynamic factors such as advection from the North Atlantic, influence primary production and the microbial loop in the Fram Strait. Here, we investigated the seasonal variability of biopolymers, microbial abundance and microbial composition within the upper 100 m during summer and fall. Flow cytometry revealed a shift in the autotrophic community from picoeukaryotes dominating in summer to a 34-fold increase of Synechococcus by fall. Furthermore, a significant decline in biopolymers concentrations covaried with increasing microbial diversity based on 16S rRNA gene sequencing along with a community shift towards fewer polymer-degrading genera in fall. The seasonal succession in the biopolymer pool and microbes indicates distinct metabolic regimes, with a higher relative abundance of polysaccharide-degrading genera in summer and a higher relative abundance of common taxa in fall. The parallel analysis of DOM and microbial diversity provides an important baseline for microbe–substrate relationships over the seasonal cycle in the Arctic Ocean.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Thermal characteristics of kelp species have been studied in many ways, but potentially persistent effects of temperature across generations are yet poorly understood. In this context, the effect of thermal priming on fertility and growth of the N-Atlantic kelp species Laminaria digitata was investigated within and across life cycle generations in a two-step common garden experiment. Using vegetative clonal gametophytes from cold (5°C) and warm (15°C) pre-experimental cultivation (3 years), we first quantified gametogenesis and recruitment over two weeks at a common temperature of 10°C. Then, recruited sporophytes were transferred to a temperature gradient spanning the tolerance range of the species from 0°C to 20°C. We hypothesized that a warm gametophyte preexperimental cultivation promotes performance of sporophytes at warm temperatures and vice versa. Interestingly, gametogenesis speed and sporophyte recruitment were higher in gametophytes following cold compared to warm pre-experimental cultivation, which indicates carry-over effects of temperature within the gametophyte generation. Compared to warm pre-experimental cultivation of gametophytes, a cold preexperimental cultivation enhanced growth of juvenile Laminaria digitata sporophytes by more than 69% at the extreme low and high temperatures of 0 and 20°C. This is the first evidence for a cross-generational effect between gametophyte parents and offspring sporophytes. As cold gametophyte cultivation increased the trait performance of gametogenesis, recruitment and thermal tolerance of juvenile sporophytes, priming of early life cycle stages may be used to increase resilience and productivity of kelps in marine forest restoration efforts and kelp mariculture.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Wildfires, as a key disturbance in forest ecosystems, are shaping the world's boreal landscapes. Changes in fire regimes are closely linked to a wide array of environmental factors, such as vegetation composition, climate change, and human activity. Arctic and boreal regions and, in particular, Siberian boreal forests are experiencing rising air and ground temperatures with the subsequent degradation of permafrost soils leading to shifts in tree cover and species composition. Compared to the boreal zones of North America or Europe, little is known about how such environmental changes might influence long-term fire regimes in Russia. The larch-dominated eastern Siberian deciduous boreal forests differ markedly from the composition of other boreal forests, yet data about past fire regimes remain sparse. Here, we present a high-resolution macroscopic charcoal record from lacustrine sediments of Lake Khamra (south-west Yakutia, Siberia) spanning the last ca. 2200 years, including information about charcoal particle sizes and morphotypes. Our results reveal a phase of increased charcoal accumulation between 600 and 900 CE, indicative of relatively high amounts of burnt biomass and high fire frequencies. This is followed by an almost 900-year-long period of low charcoal accumulation without significant peaks likely corresponding to cooler climate conditions. After 1750 CE fire frequencies and the relative amount of biomass burnt start to increase again, coinciding with a warming climate and increased anthropogenic land development after Russian colonization. In the 20th century, total charcoal accumulation decreases again to very low levels despite higher fire frequency, potentially reflecting a change in fire management strategies and/or a shift of the fire regime towards more frequent but smaller fires. A similar pattern for different charcoal morphotypes and comparison to a pollen and non-pollen palynomorph (NPP) record from the same sediment core indicate that broad-scale changes in vegetation composition were probably not a major driver of recorded fire regime changes. Instead, the fire regime of the last two millennia at Lake Khamra seems to be controlled mainly by a combination of short-term climate variability and anthropogenic fire ignition and suppression.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: 〈jats:title〉Abstract〈/jats:title〉〈jats:p〉Natural history collections are leading successful large-scale projects of specimen digitization (images, metadata, DNA barcodes), thereby transforming taxonomy into a big data science. Yet, little effort has been directed towards safeguarding and subsequently mobilizing the considerable amount of original data generated during the process of naming 15,000–20,000 species every year. From the perspective of alpha-taxonomists, we provide a review of the properties and diversity of taxonomic data, assess their volume and use, and establish criteria for optimizing data repositories. We surveyed 4113 alpha-taxonomic studies in representative journals for 2002, 2010, and 2018, and found an increasing yet comparatively limited use of molecular data in species diagnosis and description. In 2018, of the 2661 papers published in specialized taxonomic journals, molecular data were widely used in mycology (94%), regularly in vertebrates (53%), but rarely in botany (15%) and entomology (10%). Images play an important role in taxonomic research on all taxa, with photographs used in >80% and drawings in 58% of the surveyed papers. The use of omics (high-throughput) approaches or 3D documentation is still rare. Improved archiving strategies for metabarcoding consensus reads, genome and transcriptome assemblies, and chemical and metabolomic data could help to mobilize the wealth of high-throughput data for alpha-taxonomy. Because long-term—ideally perpetual—data storage is of particular importance for taxonomy, energy footprint reduction via less storage-demanding formats is a priority if their information content suffices for the purpose of taxonomic studies. Whereas taxonomic assignments are quasifacts for most biological disciplines, they remain hypotheses pertaining to evolutionary relatedness of individuals for alpha-taxonomy. For this reason, an improved reuse of taxonomic data, including machine-learning-based species identification and delimitation pipelines, requires a cyberspecimen approach—linking data via unique specimen identifiers, and thereby making them findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable for taxonomic research. This poses both qualitative challenges to adapt the existing infrastructure of data centers to a specimen-centered concept and quantitative challenges to host and connect an estimated $ \le $2 million images produced per year by alpha-taxonomic studies, plus many millions of images from digitization campaigns. Of the 30,000–40,000 taxonomists globally, many are thought to be nonprofessionals, and capturing the data for online storage and reuse therefore requires low-complexity submission workflows and cost-free repository use. Expert taxonomists are the main stakeholders able to identify and formalize the needs of the discipline; their expertise is needed to implement the envisioned virtual collections of cyberspecimens. [Big data; cyberspecimen; new species; omics; repositories; specimen identifier; taxonomy; taxonomic data.]〈/jats:p〉
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to climate change, the Arctic is warming twice as fast as the rest of the world. This leads to a northward expansion of species from the Atlantic to the Arctic. As a result, the species composition in the Arctic is changing. The Northeast Arctic cod (NEAC) is the most abundant cod population, with a distribution area in the Barents Sea and also in Svalbard. However, NEAC can also be found along the coast of Norway. There the NEAC spawns in the Lofoten region with the Norwegian Coastal cod (NCC), which in turn occurs along the Norwegian coast and in fjords. The offspring is drifted to Svalbard by the prevailing currents. The aim of this work was to investigate the composition of the cod population in Svalbard and whether a local coastal population has formed in Svalbard. For this purpose, the Pantophysin I locus (Pan I) was used to investigate to which ecotype of cod the caught animals from expeditions between August and October in 2018 and 2020 could be assigned. The analysis of Pan I in the caught cod shows that NCC inhabits both coastal and fjord areas in Svalbard. The discovery of NCC in Svalbard is an indication that due to climate change a coastal population may become established in Svalbard, with effects on the prevailing ecosystem in Svalbard.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The calving of A-68, the 5,800-km2, 1-trillion-ton iceberg shed from the Larsen C Ice Shelf in July 2017, is one of over 10 significant ice-shelf loss events in the past few decades resulting from rapid warming around the Antarctic Peninsula. The rapid thinning, retreat, and collapse of ice shelves along the Antarctic Peninsula are harbingers of warming effects around the entire continent. Ice shelves cover more than 1.5 million km2 and fringe 75% of Antarctica's coastline, delineating the primary connections between the Antarctic continent, the continental ice, and the Southern Ocean. Changes in Antarctic ice shelves bring dramatic and large-scale modifications to Southern Ocean ecosystems and continental ice movements, with global-scale implications. The thinning and rate of future ice-shelf demise is notoriously unpredictable, but models suggest increased shelf-melt and calving will become more common. To date, little is known about sub-ice-shelf ecosystems, and our understanding of ecosystem change following collapse and calving is predominantly based on responsive science once collapses have occurred. In this review, we outline what is known about (a) ice-shelf melt, volume loss, retreat, and calving, (b) ice-shelf-associated ecosystems through sub-ice, sediment-core, and pre-collapse and post-collapse studies, and (c) ecological responses in pelagic, sympagic, and benthic ecosystems. We then discuss major knowledge gaps and how science might address these gaps. This article is categorized under: Climate, Ecology, and Conservation 〉 Modeling Species and Community Interactions.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 45
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    American Geophysical Union (AGU)
    In:  EPIC3Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, American Geophysical Union (AGU), 13(10), ISSN: 1942-2466
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: We propose to make the damping time scale, which governs the decay of pseudo-elastic waves in the Elastic Viscous Plastic (EVP) sea-ice solvers, independent of the external time step and large enough to warrant numerical stability for a moderate number of internal time steps. A necessary condition is that the forcing on sea ice varies slowly on the damping time scale, in which case an EVP solution may still approach a Viscous Plastic one, but on a time scale longer than a single external time step. In this case, the EVP method becomes very close to the recently proposed modified EVP (mEVP) method in terms of stability and simulated behavior. In a simple test case dealing with sea ice breaking under the forcing of a moving cyclone, the EVP method with an enlarged damping time scale can simulate linear kinematic features which are very similar to those from the traditional EVP implementation, although a much smaller number of internal time steps is used. There is more difference in sea-ice thickness and linear kinematic features simulated in a realistic Arctic configuration between using the traditional and our suggested choices of EVP damping time scales, but it is minor considering model uncertainties associated with choices of many other parameters in sea-ice models.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 46
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    Frontiers Media SA
    In:  EPIC3Frontiers in Marine Science, Frontiers Media SA, 8, pp. 692538-692538, ISSN: 2296-7745
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The variety of Earth’s organisms is manifold. However, it is the small-scale marine community that makes the world goes round. Microbial organisms of pro- and eukaryotic origin drive the carbon supply and nutrient cycling, thus are mediating the primary productivity within the world largest ecosystem called ocean. But due to the ocean’s great size and large number of biogeographically habitats, the total of microbial species can hardly be grabbed and therefore their functional roles not fully described. However, recent advances in high-throughput sequencing technologies are revolutionizing our understanding of the marine microbial diversity, ecology and evolution. Nowadays, research questions on species differentiation can be solved with genomic approaches such as metabarcoding, while transcriptomics offers the possibility to assign gene functions even to a single cell, e.g., single-cell transcriptomics. On the other hand, due to the diversified amount of sequencing data, the certainty of a data crisis is currently evolving. Scientists are forced to broaden their view on bioinformatics resources for analysis and data storage in from of, e.g., cloud services, to ensure the data’s exchangeability. Which is why time resources are now shifting toward solving data problems rather than answering the eco-evolutionary questions stated in the first place. This review is intended to provide exchange on *omics approaches and key points for discussions on data handling used to decipher the relevant diversity and functions of microbial organisms in the marine ecosystem.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 47
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    Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research
    In:  EPIC3Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: IceBird Winter 2023 is part of a long-term sea ice observation program within the IceBird aircraft campaign series. IceBird was initiated in 2018 with the objective to ensure the long-term availability of a unique data record of direct sea-ice thickness observations to understand the role of the sea ice component for the causes and consequences of Arctic change, but is built on the heritage of airborne sea-ice thickness observations that date back to 2004. Compared to earlier airborne programs, IceBird has been enhanced with an improved sensor setup that also allows measuring snow depth on sea ice, fully collocated with sea-ice thickness and surface roughness at high resolution. The objectives of IceBird Winter 2023 include the continued quantification of trends, the separation of variability and extreme events of sea ice thickness and its snow cover in the Western Seas of the Arctic Ocean. The continuation of airborne sea-ice observation programs fulfils the requirement of consistent and long-term observations of key climate parameters. The data will be used to improve understanding of the response of sea ice and its snow cover to the ongoing warming of the Arctic and to improve snow models. Airborne data of snow and sea-ice thickness are also critically needed for the evaluation of sea-ice remote sensing products as well as for the evolution of algorithms for current and future satellite missions. Surveys from IceBird Winter 2023 will target the validation of sea-ice freeboard and snow depth estimates from CryoSat-2, ICESat-2, Sentinel-3A/B and AltiKa altimeters.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Abstract. Clouds are assumed to play an important role in the Arctic amplification process. This motivated a detailed investigation of cloud processes, including radiative and turbulent fluxes. Data from the aircraft campaign ACLOUD were analyzed with a focus on the mean and turbulent structure of the cloudy boundary layer over the Fram Strait marginal sea ice zone in late spring and early summer 2017. Vertical profiles of turbulence moments are presented from contrasting atmospheric boundary layers (ABLs) from 4 d. They differ by the magnitude of wind speed, boundary-layer height, stability, the strength of the cloud-top radiative cooling and the number of cloud layers. Turbulence statistics up to third-order moments are presented, which were obtained from horizontal-level flights and from slanted profiles. It is shown that both of these flight patterns complement each other and form a data set that resolves the vertical structure of the ABL turbulence well. The comparison of the 4 d shows that especially during weak wind, even in shallow Arctic ABLs with mixing ratios below 3 g kg-1, cloud-top cooling can serve as a main source of turbulent kinetic energy (TKE).Well-mixed ABLs are generated where TKE is increased and vertical velocity variance shows pronounced maxima in the cloud layer. Negative vertical velocity skewness points then to upside-down convection. Turbulent heat fluxes are directed upward in the cloud layer as a result of cold downdrafts. In two cases with single-layer stratocumulus, turbulent transport of heat flux and of temperature variance are both negative in the cloud layer, suggesting an important role of large eddies. In contrast, in a case with weak cloud-top cooling, these quantities are positive in the ABL due to the heating from the surface. Based on observations and results of a mixed-layer model it is shown that the maxima of turbulent fluxes are, however, smaller than the jump of the net terrestrial radiation flux across the upper part of a cloud due to the (i) shallowness of the mixed layer and (ii) the presence of a downward entrainment heat flux. The mixed-layer model also shows that the buoyancy production of TKE is substantially smaller in stratocumulus over the Arctic sea ice compared to subtropics due to a smaller surface moisture flux and smaller decrease in specific humidity (or even humidity inversions) right above the cloud top. In a case of strong wind, wind shear shapes the ABL turbulent structure, especially over rough sea ice, despite the presence of a strong cloud-top cooling. In the presence of mid-level clouds, cloud-top radiative cooling and thus also TKE in the lowermost cloud layer are strongly reduced, and the ABL turbulent structure becomes governed by stability, i.e., by the surface–air temperature difference and wind speed. A comparison of slightly unstable and weakly stable cases shows a strong reduction of TKE due to increased stability even though the absolute value of wind speed was similar. In summary, the presented study documents vertical profiles of the ABL turbulence with a high resolution in a wide range of conditions. It can serve as a basis for turbulence closure evaluation and process studies in Arctic clouds.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Comparing the output of general circulation models to observations is essential for assessing and improving the quality of models. While numerical weather prediction models are routinely assessed against a large array of observations, comparing climate models and observations usually requires long time series to build robust statistics. Here, we show that by nudging the large-scale atmospheric circulation in coupled climate models, model output can be compared to local observations for individual days. We illustrate this for three climate models during a period in April 2020 when a warm air intrusion reached the MOSAiC (Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate) expedition in the central Arctic. Radiosondes, cloud remote sensing and surface flux observations from the MOSAiC expedition serve as reference observations. The climate models AWI-CM1/ECHAM and AWI-CM3/IFS miss the diurnal cycle of surface temperature in spring, likely because both models assume the snowpack on ice to have a uniform temperature. CAM6, a model that uses three layers to represent snow temperature, represents the diurnal cycle more realistically. During a cold and dry period with pervasive thin mixed-phase clouds, AWI-CM1/ECHAM only produces partial cloud cover and overestimates downwelling shortwave radiation at the surface. AWI-CM3/IFS produces a closed cloud cover but misses cloud liquid water. Our results show that nudging the large-scale circulation to the observed state allows a meaningful comparison of climate model output even to short-term observational campaigns. We suggest that nudging can simplify and accelerate the pathway from observations to climate model improvements and substantially extends the range of observations suitable for model evaluation.
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  • 50
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    TESTSpringer Science and Business Media LLC
    In:  EPIC3Polar Biology, TESTSpringer Science and Business Media LLC, 36, pp. 895-906, ISSN: 0722-4060
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: TESTThe aim of this study was to contribute to a general understanding of the response of the Antarctic macrobenthos to environmental variability and climate-induced changes. The change in population size of selected macrobenthic organisms was investigated in the Larsen A area east of the Antarctic Peninsula in 2007 and 2011 using ROV-based imaging methods. The results were complemented by data from the Larsen B collected in 2007 to allow a conceptual reconstruction of the environment-driven changes before the period of investigation. Both Larsen areas are characterised by ice-shelf disintegration in 1995 and 2002, respectively, as well as high inter-annual variability in sea-ice cover and oceanographic conditions. In 2007 one ascidian species, Molgula pedunculata, was abundant north and south of the stripe of remaining ice shelf between Larsen A and B. Population densities decreased drastically in the Larsen A between 2007 and 2011, coincident with the decrease in Corella eumyota, another ascidian. Among the ophiuroids, the population of deposit feeders increased, while suspension feeders halved their abundance. Current measurements indicated a northward flow between the Larsen B and Larsen A, suggesting that a major physical forcing on benthic population development comes from the South. The results demonstrate that Antarctic macrobenthic populations can exhibit dramatic population dynamics. Analyses of sea-ice dynamics, salinity, temperature and surprisingly ice-shelf disintegration history, however, did not provide any clear evidence for environmental drivers underlying the apparent changes. © 2013 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The present study examines the effects of experimentally generated disturbance on bathyal nematode communities at the LTER (Long-Term Ecological Research) observatory HAUSGARTEN, situated in the Fram Strait, between Greenland and Svalbard. In order to understand the complex interactions between the biota and environmental perturbations we deployed a free-falling device (bottom lander) equipped with three rotating fork-like disturber units, able to perturbate the upper sediment layers with different disturbance frequencies at chosen time intervals. During a one-year deployment at 2493 m water depth, disturber unit DI was programmed to rotate every 14 days, DII every 28 days, and DIII every 72 days, resulting in 28, 14, and 7 perturbations, respectively. Sediment sampling following this experimental period was conducted with push-coring devices deployed by the Remotely Operated Vehicle “QUEST 4000” (MARUM, Bremen). These sediment cores were sub-sampled to determine the effect of the sediment perturbations on various sediment parameters (i.e., grain size distribution, chloroplastic pigment concentrations) as well as on benthic nematode communities. A total of 4773 nematodes from 27 families and 81 genera were identified. Nematode densities in the disturbed areas ranged from 617 ind. / 10 cm2 to 1566 ind. / 10 cm2, with a mean density of 1193 ind. / 10 cm2 observed overall in the disturbed sediments. Control sediments contained on average 20% more nematode specimens than were found within the disturbed sediments, with an average density of 1477 ind. / 10 cm2 observed. Nematode evenness (J'), genera richness (EG(51)) and heterogeneity (H′) were not significantly different between the treatments and controls (undisturbed vs disturbance). We found a significant effect of the interaction of disturbance frequency and sediment depth (interaction term Fr x De) on heterogeneity and genera richness, while evenness significantly differed between different sediment depths (De) and within the disturbed sediments between different disturbance frequencies (Fr). Although surface sediments in the three disturbed areas were effectively perturbated, sediment depth still has the most pronounced influence on nematode community attributes, while the experimentally induced disturbance had only a limited impact on nematode diversity and community structure. Although we found the density of some nematode genera was negatively affected by the disturbances, the deep-sea nematode community at HAUSGARTEN was generally characterized by a relatively high diversity and seemed to be largely resilient to the experimental disturbances.
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  • 52
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    In:  EPIC3Wissen um sechs, Stadtbibliothek Bremerhaven, 2020-02-20
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The aim of our study is to analyse physical properties of internal layers of deep ice cores in Greenland (NGRIP and NEEM) and a new ice core record from the East GReenland Ice-core Project (EGRIP) on the North East Greenland Ice Stream (NEGIS). For this purpose, in the first part of this study, we have established the initial chronology for the EGRIP ice core over the Holocene and the late last glacial period. We rely on conductivity patterns and volcanic events determined by means of dielectric profiling (DEP), electrical conductivity measurements (ECM) and tephra records for the synchronization between the EGRIP, NEEM and NGRIP ice cores in Greenland. We have transferred the annual-layer-counted Greenland ice Core Chronology 2005 (GICC05) timescale from the NGRIP core to the EGRIP ice core by means of 373 match points. The second part of this study compares numerically modelled radargrams and the airborne radar measurements (radio-echo sounding) to understand the recorded physical properties of internal layers towards reflection mechanisms. Synthetic modelling of electromagnetic wave propagation has been applied to the EGRIP, NEEM and NGRIP2 ice cores based on the conductivity and permittivity, as measured at 250 kHz by DEP. For the comparison between synthetic and observed data, we have used radio-echo sounding data from AWI’s multichannel ultra-wideband radar around the EGRIP drill site, that were recorded during the 2018 field season, and the CReSIS data from the University of Kansas around the NEEM and NGRIP2 drill sites. The timescales (depth-age relation from first part of our study) have been transferred to the synthetic and observed radargrams by means of sensitivity studies. We have found that conductivity only explains a fraction of the radar signals in Greenland ice sheet and the orientated fabric is widespread and influences the radar data.
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 60
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Other , notRev
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Other , notRev
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Other , notRev
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Other , notRev
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Other , notRev
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Other , notRev
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Due to changing temperature regimes in the North- and the Wadden Sea, a fish survey in the Sylt Rømø bight (SRB) was established in 2007 for at least ten years. The aim is to investigate the Wadden Sea fish fauna with special interest in changes of migration behavior, species composition and feeding habits. Seven stations are sampled monthly inside the SRB. Two additional stations, one outside the bight, one close to the Danish border are sampled as references four times a year. For sampling a mini bottom trawl, total length 17 m, trawl opening 7 m, height 3 m with a mesh size of 36 mm in the wings, 16 mm in the mid part and 6 mm in the cod end is used. At every station one haul in the water column and another at the bottom are sampled, for 15 minutes at a speed of approximately 2 knots. The data will help to give a more detailed picture of food chains and energy flows inside the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Antarctica’s ice shelves play a key role in stabilizing their related ice sheets. The ice shelves of western Dronning Maud Land – including the Ekström, Atka, Jelbart, Fimbul and Vigrid ice shelves – currently buttress a catchment that comprises an ice volume equivalent to 0.95 meters of sea level. Any future increase in ice shelf mass loss, with basal melting likely being the main cause, will inevitably accelerate ice sheet drainage and contribute to global sea level rise. Since basal melting largely depends on ice-ocean interactions, it is crucial to attain reliable and consistent bathymetry models to estimate water and heat exchange beneath these ice shelves. We have constructed bathymetry models for an area of about 63,000 km2 beneath the ice shelves of western Dronning Maud Land by inverting airborne gravity data, tied to radar, seismic, and offshore depth reference points. New high-resolution airborne magnetic data across the ice shelves point to Jurassic intrusions and seaward-dipping reflectors originating from Gondwana breakup; enabling us to consider geological density variations as part of the bathymetry modelling process. Our bathymetric models reveal deep glacial troughs beneath the ice shelves, and sills close to the continental shelf breaks which currently limit the possible entry of Warm Deep Water from the Southern Ocean. The present-day average thermocline depth is comparable to the average depths of saddles along the sills, which present gateways into the sub-ice cavities. This leads us to suggest a high sensitivity for these ice shelves to changes in ocean temperature and especially thermocline depth in the future. Once a significant amount of warm water overtops the sills, the deep troughs will allow for fast access to the grounding line, after which it seems there may be little to stop basal melting from rapidly eroding the ice shelves of western Dronning Maud Land.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Today's fast digital growth made data the most essential tool for scientific progress in Earth Systems Science. Hence, we strive to assemble a modular research infrastructure comprising a collection of tools and services that allow researchers to turn big data into scientific outcomes. Major roadblocks are (i) the increasing number and complexity of research platforms, devices, and sensors, (ii) the heterogeneous project-driven requirements towards, e. g., satellite data, sensor monitoring, quality assessment and control, processing, analysis and visualization, and (iii) the demand for near real time analyses. These requirements have led us to build a generic and cost-effective framework O2A (Observation to Archive) to enable, control, and access the flow of sensor observations to archives and repositories. By establishing O2A within major cooperative projects like MOSES and Digital Earth in the research field Earth and Environment of the German Helmholtz Association, we extend research data management services, computing powers, and skills to connect with the evolving software and storage services for data science. This fully supports the typical scientific workflow from its very beginning to its very end, that is, from data acquisition to final data publication. The key modules of O2A's digital research infrastructure established by AWI to enable Digital Earth Science are implementing the FAIR principles: Sensor Web, to register sensor applications and capture controlled meta data before and alongside any measurement in the field Data ingest, allowing researchers to feed data into storage systems and processing pipelines in a prepared and documented way, at best in controlled NRT data streams Dashboards, allowing researchers to find and access data and share and collaborate among partners Workspace, enabling researchers to access and use data with research software in a cloud-based virtualized infrastructure that allows researchers to analyse massive amounts of data on the spot Archiving and publishing data via repositories and Digital Object Identifiers (DOI)
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 72
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  EPIC3EGU General Assembly 2020, 2020-05-2020-05Late Holocene fire history documented at Lake Khamra, SW Yakutia (Eastern Siberia)
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Recent large-scale fire events in Siberia have drawn increased attention to boreal forest fire history. Boreal forests contain about 25% of all global biomass and act as an enormous carbon storage. Fire events are important ecological disturbances connected to the overarching environmental changes that face the Arctic and Subarctic, like vegetation dynamics, permafrost degradation, changes in soil nutrient cycling and global warming, and act as the dominant driver behind boreal forest’s landscape carbon balance. By looking into past fire regimes we can learn about fire frequency and potential linkages to other environmental factors, e.g. fuel types, reconstructed temperature/humidity or geomorphologic landscape dynamics. Unfortunately, fire history data is still very sparse in large parts of Siberia, a region strongly influenced by climate change. The Global Charcoal Database (www.paleofire.org) lists only a handful of continuous charcoal records for all of Siberia, with only three of those featuring published data from macroscopic charcoal as opposed to microscopic charcoal from pollen slides. We aim to reconstruct the late Holocene fire history using lacustrine sediments of Lake Khamra (SW Yakutia at N 59.99°, E 112.98°). It covers an area of c. 4.6 km² with about 22 m maximum water depth, located within the zone of transition from summer-green and larch-dominated to evergreen boreal forest. We present the first continuous, high-resolution (c. 10 years/sample) macroscopic charcoal record (〉 150 μm) including information on particle size and morphology for the past c. 2200 years. We compare this to complementary information from microscopic charcoal in pollen slides, a pollen and non-pollen palynomorph record as well as μXRF data. This multi-proxy approach adds valuable data about fire activity in the region and allows a comparison of different prevalent fire reconstruction methods. As the first record of its kind from Siberia, it provides a long-term context for current fire activity in central Siberian boreal forests and enables a better understanding of the environmental interactions occurring in the changing subarctic landscape.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: During the largest polar expedition in history starting in September 2019, the German research icebreaker Polarstern spends a whole year drifting with the ice through the Arctic Ocean. The MOSAiC expedition takes the closest look ever at the Arctic even throughout the polar winter to gain fundamental insights and most unique on-site data for a better understanding of global climate change. Hundreds of researchers from 20 countries are involved. Scientists will use the in situ gathered data instantaneously in near-real time modus as well as long afterwards all around the globe taking climate research to a completely new level. Hence, proper data management, sampling strategies beforehand, and monitoring actual data flow as well as processing, analysis and sharing of data during and long after the MOSAiC expedition are the most essential tools for scientific gain and progress. To prepare for that challenge we adapted and integrated the research data management framework O2A “Data flow from Observations to Archives” to the needs of the MOSAiC expedition on board Polarstern as well as on land for data storage and access at the Alfred Wegener Institute Computing and Data Center in Bremerhaven, Germany. Our O2A-framework assembles a modular research infrastructure comprising a collection of tools and services. These components allow researchers to register all necessary sensor metadata beforehand linked to automatized data ingestion and to ensure and monitor data flow as well as to process, analyze, and publish data to turn the most valuable and uniquely gained arctic data into scientific outcomes. The framework further allows for the integration of data obtained with discrete sampling devices into the data flow. These requirements have led us to adapt the generic and cost-effective framework O2A to enable, control, and access the flow of sensor observations to archives in a cloud-like infrastructure on board Polarstern and later on to land based repositories for international availability. Major roadblocks of the MOSAiC-O2A data flow framework are (i) the increasing number and complexity of research platforms, devices, and sensors, (ii) the heterogeneous interdisciplinary driven requirements towards, e. g., satellite data, sensor monitoring, in situ sample collection, quality assessment and control, processing, analysis and visualization, and (iii) the demand for near real time analyses on board as well as on land with limited satellite bandwidth. The key modules of O2A's digital research infrastructure established by AWI are implementing the FAIR principles: SENSORWeb, to register sensor applications and sampling devices and capture controlled meta data before and alongside any measurements in the field Data ingest, allowing researchers to feed data into storage systems and processing pipelines in a prepared and documented way, at best in controlled near real-time data streams Dashboards allowing researchers to find and access data and share and collaborate among partners Workspace enabling researchers to access and use data with research software utilizing a cloud-based virtualized infrastructure that allows researchers to analyze massive amounts of data on the spot Archiving and publishing data via repositories and Digital Object Identifiers (DOI)
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Previous scientific ocean drilling expeditions have revealed that sediments deposited in the Kerguelen Plateau region have the potential to provide an out-standing chronicle of regional and global climate changes. In particular, this area is an excellent location to monitor subantarctic and high-latitude climate dynamics and obtain far-field information documenting Antarctic climate history in a world warmer than today. Here we report first results from site survey RV Sonne cruise SO272 that sailed January 11 to March 4 2020 from Port Louis, Mauritius, to Cape Town, South Africa. During the cruise ~4000 km of high resolution seismic reflection data were recorded along 18 seismic profiles across the central and southern Kerguelen Plateau. At 11 stations sediment cores with recoveries of up to 10m were retrieved [GU1] to complement the seismic studies and provide ages of the outcropping sediment at the sea floor. Three gravity cores targeted the Labuan Basin recovering Plio-Pleistocene diatom ooze with drop stones and rhythmic changes in reflectance. Eight gravity cores targeted the Raggatt Basin with the main objective to penetrate through the upper undifferentiated layer of surface sediment and probe the below much older outcropping sediment. Carbonate rich sediments were successfully retrieved at three locations with microfossil assemblages of late Eocene age. X-ray fluorescence core scanning, benthic stable isotope and bio-stratigraphic data will be presented. Seismic and geological datasets will form the base for an IODP full proposal to drill a complete Miocene to Paleocene high latitude sediment package, build upon the #983-Pre IODP proposal.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: We investigated diets of 24 Barents Sea zooplankton taxa to understand pelagic food-web processes during late summer, including the importance of sea ice algae-produced carbon. This was achieved by combining insights derived from multiple and complementary trophic marker approaches to construct individual aspects of feeding. Specifically, we determined proportions of algal-produced fatty acids (FAs) to reflect the reliance on diatom- versus dinoflagellate-derived carbon, highly branched isoprenoid (HBI) lipids that distinguish between ice-associated and pelagic carbon sources, and sterols to indicate the degree of carnivory. Copepods had the strongest diatom signal based on FAs, while a lack of sea ice algae-associated HBIs (IP25, IPSO25) suggested that they fed on pelagic rather than ice-associated diatoms. The amphipod Themisto libellula and the ctenophores Beroë cucumis and Mertensia ovum had a higher contribution of dinoflagellate-produced FAs. There was a high degree of carnivory in this food web, as indicated by the FA carnivory index 18:1(n−9)/18:1(n−7) (mean value 〈 1 only in the pteropod Clione limacina), the presence of copepod-associated FAs in most of the taxa, and the absence of algal-produced HBIs in small copepod taxa, such as Oithona similis and Pseudocalanus spp. The coherence between concentrations of HBIs and phytosterols within individuals suggested that phytosterols provide a good additional indication for algal ingestion. Sea ice algae-associated HBIs were detected in six zooplankton species (occurring in krill, amphipods, pteropods, and appendicularians), indicating an overall low to moderate contribution of ice-associated carbon from late-summer sea ice to pelagic consumption. The unexpected occurrence of ice-derived HBIs in pteropods and appendicularians, however, suggests an importance of sedimenting ice-derived material at least for filter feeders within the water column at this time of year.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Investigating the physical conditions underlying and enabling fast glacier flow is crucial to understanding the future stability of ice sheets, as well as their impact on future sea-level rise. Seismic surveys have been widely used to measure material properties of the ice and substrate, including seismic velocity structure, anisotropy, and bed properties. While traditional seismic surveys rely on natural seismicity or man-made sources such as explosives, anthropogenic noise generated through ice-core drilling can also be used as a seismic source. Placing geophones around an ice-core drilling site therefore presents an exciting opportunity to complement and extend measurements from ice cores to the surrounding area. Here, we present preliminary results from a seismic investigation conducted using noise generated by ice-core drilling activities at the East Greenland Ice Core Project (EGRIP) site. The EGRIP site is located near the onset region of the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream (NEGIS), which drains over 10% of the Greenland Ice Sheet. The ice-core drilling process creates a variety of semi-continuous (e.g., generator-induced) and impulsive (e.g., core break) seismic source signals. As drilling progresses through the ice column, the corresponding variation in seismic signals can be used to generate a vertical profile of seismic properties. In the summer of 2019, nine 3-component surface geophones were deployed at 0, 300, 750, 1500 and 3000 m distance from the drill site along two lines corresponding to the along- and cross-flow directions of the ice stream. The network recorded at a sampling frequency of 400 Hz for 28 days, during which drilling progressed between 1920 and 2110 m depth below the surface. Both continuous and impulsive sources related to the drilling process were recorded at all stations. Impulsive arrivals were identified using STA/LTA phase-picking across multiple components and stations. Because the depth of the drill head at any given time is known, the move-out of each event could then be used to determine the integrated seismic velocity structure along the source-receiver ray path. Additionally, sporadic passive microseismic signals resulting from ice stream motion over the bed were observed at all stations. Both individually distinguishable icequakes and 3-5 minute-long “gliding” tremors were recorded, indicative of stick-slip motion at the bed of NEGIS. Further work will concentrate on modelling these tremors to resolve the shear modulus of the substrate, and on incorporating continuous drill-generated noise into our overall analysis. Our approach demonstrates the added value of opportunistic seismic networks as a complement to ice drilling operations.
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 79
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  EPIC316th Deep Sea Biology Symposium, Brest, France, 2021-09-2021-09
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Polymetallic nodules 1) Occur on abyssal plains as lumps of aggregated minerals rendering their collection under commercial consideration 2) Provide hard substrate for sessile fauna and influence distribution of local infauna and bacterial communities1
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Climate change-driven thermal erosion makes Muostakh Island in the southern Laptev Sea (70°35´ N, 130° 0´ E) a very fragile ecosystem of the Arctic. Thus, understanding its biodiversity, the changes and loss in response to climate is a timely and pressing scientific objective. Here, we characterize the microbiome associated with several ice wedges covering the past ~45,000 years of climate/ecosystem history. Ice wedges are a specific feature in the northern permafrost landscapes. They develop seasonally by spring-melting of snow that runs through permafrost contraction cracks, accumulates and creates ice formations in the wintertime through congelifraction. Such environment offers ideal conditions for the preservation of microbial cells and DNA over geological time. Our work tackles four main research aspects, requiring an interdisciplinary approach with synergies between microbial ecology, geo- and paleo-sciences. First, we characterize the ice wedge mineral composition as an environmental micro-niche. Second, we analyze the biodiversity of the microbial communities via shotgun metagenomics of the ancient DNA (aDNA) extracted from the ice wedges. Third, we investigate the biomass content by recovering and enumerating microbial cells present in the ice wedges. In addition, we apply infrared spectroscopy to obtain cellular fingerprints that can serve as biomarkers. Finally, we assess the physiological state of microorganisms using stable isotope probing (SIP) experiments in microcosms that reproduce the environmental conditions (subzero temperature and anoxic conditions). By integrating microbial biodiversity with activity and environmental context, this study will provide valuable new insights into Muostakh’s ice wedge microbiome and the dynamics underlying its changes over time and climatic conditions.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Allometric relationships between body properties of animals are useful for a wide variety of purposes, such as estimation of biomass, growth, population structure, bioenergetic modelling and carbon flux studies. This study summarizes allometric relationships of zooplankton and nekton species that play major roles in polar marine food webs. Measurements were performed on 639 individuals of 15 species sampled during three expeditions in the Southern Ocean (winter and summer) and 2374 individuals of 14 species sampled during three expeditions in the Arctic Ocean (spring and summer). The information provided by this study fills current knowledge gaps on relationships between length and wet/dry mass of understudied animals, such as various gelatinous zooplankton, and of animals from understudied seasons and maturity stages, for example, for the krill Thysanoessa macrura and larval Euphausia superba caught in winter. Comparisons show that there is intra-specific variation in length–mass relationships of several species depending on season, e.g. for the amphipod Themisto libellula. To investigate the potential use of generalized regression models, comparisons between sexes, maturity stages or age classes were performed and are discussed, such as for the several krill species and T. libellula. Regression model comparisons on age classes of the fish E. antarctica were inconclusive about their general use. Other allometric measurements performed on carapaces, eyes, heads, telsons, tails and otoliths provided models that proved to be useful for estimating length or mass in, e.g. diet studies. In some cases, the suitability of these models may depend on species or developmental stages.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: During the RV Polarstern expedition to the southern Weddell Sea, in Feb 2021, a breeding colony of notothenioid icefish (Neopagetopsis ionah, Nybelin 1947) of globally unprecedented extent has been discovered. The colony, at time of survey, covered at least ~240 square kilometres of the eastern flank of the Filchner Trough and was comprised of fish nests at a density of 0.26 nests per square metre, representing an estimated minimum total of ~60 million active nests, and an associated fish biomass of 〉 60,000 tonnes. The majority of nests were each occupied by 1 adult fish guarding 1735 eggs (±433 SD). Bottom water temperatures adjacent to the nests were up to 2 °C warmer than the surrounding bottom waters, indicating a spatial correlation between the modified Warm Deep Water (mWDW) upflow onto the Weddell Shelf and active nesting.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: A thorough and reliable assessment of changes in sea surface water temperatures (SSWTs) is essential for understanding the effects of global warming on long-term trends in marine ecosystems and their communities. The first long-term temperature measurements were established almost a century ago, especially in coastal areas, and some of them are still in operation. However, while in earlier times these measurements were done by hand every day, current environmental long-term observation stations (ELTOS) are often fully automated and integrated in cabled underwater observatories (UWOs). With this new technology, year-round measurements became feasible even in remote or difficult to access areas, such as coastal areas of the Arctic Ocean in winter, where measurements were almost impossible just a decade ago. In this context, there is a question over what extent the sampling frequency and accuracy influence results in long-term monitoring approaches. In this paper, we address this with a combination of lab experiments on sensor accuracy and precision and a simulated sampling program with different sampling frequencies based on a continuous water temperature dataset from Svalbard, Arctic, from 2012 to 2017. Our laboratory experiments showed that temperature measurements with 12 different temperature sensor types at different price ranges all provided measurements accurate enough to resolve temperature changes over years on a level discussed in the literature when addressing climate change effects in coastal waters. However, the experiments also revealed that some sensors are more suitable for measuring absolute temperature changes over time, while others are more suitable for determining relative temperature changes. Our simulated sampling program in Svalbard coastal waters over 5 years revealed that the selection of a proper sampling frequency is most relevant for discriminating significant long-term temperature changes from random daily, seasonal, or interannual fluctuations. While hourly and daily sampling could deliver reliable, stable, and comparable results concerning temperature increases over time, weekly sampling was less able to reliably detect overall significant trends. With even lower sampling frequencies (monthly sampling), no significant temperature trend over time could be detected. Although the results were obtained for a specific site, they are transferable to other aquatic research questions and non-polar regions.
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Calcifying plankton in the upper ocean produce calcium carbonate (CaCO3) shells that sink to the seafloor after death resulting in the vertical transport of inorganic carbon in shells and organic carbon in carcasses. In situ observations of pelagic detritus on the abyssal plain are very scarce. Carcasses are rapidly scavenged and shells may dissolve owing to undersaturation of deep waters with respect to CaCO3. We observed more than 300 egg cases of the epipelagic cephalopod Argonauta sp. in 9 large seafloor image surveys investigated across the Clarion Clipperton Zone in the Pacific between 2010 and 2020. Females of this octopus produce calcite egg cases that are used for buoyancy and as substrate on which to attach their eggs in the water column. These cases sink to the seafloor, presumably upon death of the octopus. In one area, between 3970 and 4551 m water depth surveyed in 2019, we documented more than 200 complete and fragments of egg cases (5.84 ± 1.8 cm in size) on the seafloor, complete and broken and in various states of dissolution. Here, we present observations of egg case dissolution in situ and of 99 white deposits that were likely largely dissolved egg cases. Our observations reveal a previously undocumented pathway of epipelagic inorganic carbon to the abyssal plain. Preliminary estimations indicate that the local contribution of Argonauta egg cases to the vertical transport of carbonates is likely small compared to other planktonic calcifiers, but the geographic extent of the deposition in the eastern Pacific is apparently large. This study highlights the need for in situ observations to discover and document carbon fluxes in the deep sea, and for consideration of life history traits in unraveling elusive pathways within the biological pump.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The collection of zooplankton swimmers and sinkers in time-series sediment traps provides unique insight into year-round and interannual trends in zooplankton population dynamics. These samples are particularly valuable in remote and difficult to access areas such as the Arctic Ocean, where samples from the ice-covered season are rare. In the present study, we investigated zooplankton composition based on swimmers and sinkers collected by sediment traps at water depths of 180–280, 800–1320, and 2320–2550 m, over a period of 16 yr (2000–2016) at the Long-Term Ecological Research observatory HAUSGARTEN located in the eastern Fram Strait (79°N, 4°E). The time-series data showed seasonal and interannual trends within the dominant zooplankton groups including copepoda, foraminifera, ostracoda, amphipoda, pteropoda, and chaetognatha. Amphipoda and copepoda dominated the abundance of swimmers while pteropoda and foraminifera were the most important sinkers. Although the seasonal occurrence of these groups was relatively consistent between years, there were notable interannual variations in abundance, suggesting the influence of various environmental condi- tions such as sea-ice dynamic and lateral advection of water masses, for example, meltwater and Atlantic water. Statistical analyses revealed a correlation between the Arctic dipole climatic index and sea-ice dynamics (i.e., ice coverage and concentration), as well as the importance of the distance from the ice edge on swimmer composition patterns and carbon export.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Rapid climate change is placing many marine species at risk of local extinction. Recent studies show that epigenetic mechanisms (e.g. DNA methylation, histone modifications) can facilitate both within and transgenerational plasticity to cope with changing environments. However, epigenetic reprogramming (erasure and re-establishment of epigenetic marks) during gamete and early embryo development may hinder transgenerational epigenetic inheritance. Most of our knowledge about reprogramming stems from mammals and model organisms, whereas the prevalence and extent of reprogramming among non-model species from wild populations is rarely investigated. Moreover, whether reprogramming dynamics are sensitive to changing environmental conditions is not well known, representing a key knowledge gap in the pursuit to identify mechanisms underlying links between parental exposure to changing climate patterns and environmentally-adapted offspring phenotypes. Here, we investigated epigenetic reprogramming (DNA methylation/hydroxymethylation) and gene expression across gametogenesis and embryogenesis of marine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) under three ocean warming scenarios (ambient, + 1.5 °C and + 4 °C). We found that parental acclimation to ocean warming led to dynamic and temperature-sensitive reprogramming throughout offspring development. Both global methylation/hydroxymethylation and expression of genes involved in epigenetic modifications were strongly and differentially affected by the increased warming scenarios. Comparing transcriptomic profiles from gonads, mature gametes, and early embryonic stages showed sex-specific accumulation and temperature sensitivity of several epigenetic actors. DNA methyltransferase induction was primarily maternally inherited (suggesting maternal control of remethylation), whereas induction of several histone-modifying enzymes was shaped by both parents. Importantly, massive, temperature-specific changes to the epigenetic landscape occurred in blastula, a critical stage for successful embryo development, which could, thus, translate to substantial consequences for offspring phenotype resilience in warming environments. In summary, our study identified key stages during gamete and embryo development with temperature-sensitive reprogramming and epigenetic gene regulation, reflecting potential “windows of opportunity” for adaptive epigenetic responses under future climate change.
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  • 87
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  EPIC312th International Phycological Congress, Chile - online, 2021-03-22-2021-03-26
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Plastic pollution is now a worldwide phenomenon affecting all marine ecosystems, but some ecosystems and regions remain understudied. Here, we review the presence and impacts of macroplastics and microplastics for four such ecosystems: mangroves, seagrass meadows, the Arctic Ocean and the deep seafloor. Plastic production has grown steadily, and thus the impact on species and ecosystems has increased, too. The accumulated evidence also indicates that plastic pollution is an additional and increasing stressor to these already ecosystems and many of the species living in them. However, laboratory or field studies, which provide strong correlational or experimental evidence of ecological harm due to plastic pollution remain scarce or absent for these ecosystems. Based on these findings, we give some research recommendations for the future.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The Asian brush-clawed shore crab Hemigrapsus takanoi was introduced to the northern Wadden Sea (southeastern North Sea) in 2009 and now represents one of the most abundant brachyuran crab species. Abundance studies revealed an increase of mean crab densities on mixed reefs of native blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) and Pacific oysters (Magallana gigas) from 18 individuals m−2 in 2011 to 216 individuals m−2 in 2020. Despite its current high densities only little is known about the feeding habits of H. takanoi, its effects on prey populations and on the associated community in the newly invaded habitat. We summarize results of individual field and laboratory experiments that were conducted to assess feeding habits and consumption effects caused by Asian brush-clawed shore crabs and, additionally, compare the feeding ecology of H. takanoi with the one of the native shore crab Carcinus maenas. Field experiments manipulating crab densities revealed that both crab species affected the recruitment success of blue mussels, Pacific oysters and Australian barnacles (Austrominius modestus) with highest number of recruits at crab exclusion. However, endobenthic polychaetes within the reefs were differently affected. Only the native C. maenas caused a significant reduction in polychaete densities, whereas the introduced H. takanoi had no effect. Additional comparative laboratory studies revealed that single C. maenas consume more juvenile blue mussels than Asian brush-clawed shore crabs of the same size class. When offering amphipods as a mobile prey species, we found the same pattern with higher consumption rates by C. maenas than by H. takanoi. For Asian but not for native shore crabs, we detected a sex-dependent feeding behavior with male H. takanoi preferring blue mussels, while females consumed more amphipods. Considering mean crab densities and feeding behavior, our results suggest that despite lower consumption rates of single crabs, Asian brush-clawed shore crabs can cause stronger impacts on prey organisms than the native C. maenas, because H. takanoi exceeds their densities manifold. A strong impact of the invader on prey populations is supported by low amphipod occurrence at sites where H. takanoi density is high in the study area. Thus, the introduced Asian brush-clawed shore crab is an additional consumer with significant effects on the associated community of mixed reefs of mussels and oysters in the Wadden Sea.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Thesis , notRev
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: In 1999 the AWI established the HAUSGARTEN observatory, to assess the impact of climate change on Arctic ecosystems in Fram Strait (Arctic), which included repeated camera transects to assess changes on the deep Arctic seafloor. A first analysis of the footage highlighted that marine debris increased over time. Plastic debris was also sighted during sea surface observations for seabird surveys. This prompted us to add a pollution observatory to the ongoing research programme FRAM, aiming to quantify plastic pollution in different ecosystem compartments to identify hidden sinks. Here, we summarise the results of this work encompassing matrices such as snow, sea ice, surface waters, water column, deep seafloor, biota and Arctic beaches. Images from the deep seafloor taken since 2002 showed a marine debris concentration of 4,571 ± 1,628 items km-2, which is in range with polluted oceanic regions. Visual surveys of floating debris from the same region revealed 500 times lower concentrations (9 items km-2), showing that the deep Arctic seafloor constitutes a sink for marine debris. Quantities of 9–483 g m-2 were reported from 15 beach surveys on Svalbard by citizen scientists. Plastics accounted for 〉80% of the mass, primarily from fisheries. Microplastics in samples from the sea surface, water column, sediment, sea ice and snow were analysed by combining state-of–the-art sampling technology with µFT-IR analyses. Using the same analysis for samples from different ecosystem compartments enabled us to determine the vertical distribution of microplastics, as sea ice entrains extremely high microplastic concentrations, which are released to the underlying waters during ice melts. In-situ pump-filtrations throughout the water column revealed that microplastics prevail at all depths in Fram Strait (0–1,287 items m–3). Microplastic concentrations in sediments ranged from 239–13,331 N kg–1. Highest microplastics concentrations in sediments and the water column were measured close to the marginal ice zone and polymer compositions indicated a sea ice origin for most particles found in the deep waters of East Greenland, indicating sea ice as a temporal sink. Indeed, the highest concentration (1.2 ± 1.4) ×107 items m-3) was recorded in an ice core from pack ice of Fram Strait. The presence of microplastic in snow samples from ice floes indicates atmospheric deposition of microplastics. Recent research shows that resident zooplankton ingests microplastics, which were also found in the ice algae Melosira arctica. The data indicate that the seafloor and sea ice constitute (temporal) sinks of plastic pollution and that pollution levels are high, despite of the distance to sources. The receding sea ice has already led to increased anthropogenic pressure in the Fram Strait, which is likely to become a major shipping lane during summer. The number of fishers operating around Svalbard and of ship calls to Longyearbyen has already increased significantly. In addition, the prevailing hydrography promotes the transport of plastic pollutants from distant sources, mostly from the Atlantic Ocean, but also from the Central Arctic via the Transpolar Drift. Long-range atmospheric transport and deposition likely adds to this.
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Scientific, industrial and societal needs call urgently for the development and establishment of intelligent, cost-effective and ecologically sustainable monitoring protocols and robotic platforms for the continuous exploration of marine ecosystems. Internet Operated Vehicles (IOVs) such as crawlers, provide a versatile alternative to conventional observing and sampling tools, being tele-operated, (semi-) permanent mobile platforms capable of operating on the deep and coastal seafloor. Here we present outstanding observations made by the crawler “Wally” in the last decade at the Barkley Canyon (BC, Canada, NE Pacific) methane hydrates site, as a part of the NEPTUNE cabled observatory. The crawler followed the evolution of microhabitats formed on and around biotic and/or abiotic structural features of the site (e.g., a field of egg towers of buccinid snails, and a colonized boulder). Furthermore, episodic events of fresh biomass input were observed (i.e., the mass transport of large gelatinous particles, the scavenging of a dead jellyfish and the arrival of macroalgae from shallower depths). Moreover, we report numerous faunal behaviors (i.e., sablefish rheo- and phototaxis, the behavioral reactions and swimming or resting patterns of further fish species, encounters with octopuses and various crab intra- and interspecific interactions). We report on the observed animal reactions to both natural and artificial stimuli (i.e., crawler’s movement and crawler light systems). These diverse observations showcase different capabilities of the crawler as a modern robotic monitoring platform for marine science and offshore industry. Its long deployments and mobility enable its efficiency in combining the repeatability of long-term studies with the versatility to opportunistically observe rarely seen incidents when they occur, as highlighted here. Finally, we critically assess the empirically recorded ecological footprint and the potential impacts of crawler operations on the benthic ecosystem of the Barkley Canyon hydrates site, together with potential solutions to mitigate them into the future.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Recent advances in robotic design, autonomy and sensor integration create solutions for the exploration of deep-sea environments,transferable to the oceans of icy moons. Marine platforms do not yet have the mission autonomy capacity of their space counterparts (e.g., the state of the art Mars Perseverance rover mission), although different levels of autonomous navigation and mapping, as well as sampling, are an extant capability. In this setting their increasingly biomimicked designs may allow access to complex environmental scenarios, with novel, highly-integrated life-detecting, oceanographic and geochemical sensor packages. Here, we lay an outlook for the upcoming advances in deep-sea robotics through synergies with space technologies within three major research areas: biomimetic structure and propulsion (including power storage and generation), artificial intelligence and cooperative networks, and life-detecting instrument design. New morphological and material designs, with miniaturized and more diffuse sensor packages, will advance robotic sensing systems. Artificial intelligence algorithms controlling navigation and communications will allow the further development of the behavioral biomimicking by cooperating networks. Solutions will have to be tested within infrastructural networks of cabled observatories, neutrino telescopes, and off-shore industry sites with agendas and modalities that are beyond the scope of our work, but could draw inspiration on the proposed examples for the operational combination of fixed and mobile platforms.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Wildfires play an essential role in the ecology of boreal forests. In eastern Siberia, fire activity has been increasing in recent years, challenging the livelihoods of local communities. Intensifying fire regimes also increase disturbance pressure on the boreal forests, which currently protect the permafrost beneath from accelerated degradation. However, long-term relationships between changes in fire regime and forest structure remain largely unknown. We assess past fire-vegetation feedbacks using sedimentary proxy records from Lake Satagay, Central Yakutia, Siberia, covering the past c. 10,800 years. Results from macroscopic and microscopic charcoal analyses indicate high amounts of burnt biomass during the Early Holocene, and that the present-day, low-severity surface fire regime has been in place since c. 4,500 years before present. A pollen-based quantitative reconstruction of vegetation cover and a terrestrial plant record based on sedimentary ancient DNA metabarcoding suggest a pronounced shift in forest structure toward the Late Holocene. Whereas the Early Holocene was characterized by postglacial open larch-birch woodlands, forest structure changed toward the modern, mixed larch-dominated closed-canopy forest during the Mid-Holocene. We propose a potential relationship between open woodlands and high amounts of burnt biomass, as well as a mediating effect of dense larch forest on the climate-driven intensification of fire regimes. Considering the anticipated increase in forest disturbances (droughts, insect invasions, and wildfires), higher tree mortality may force the modern state of the forest to shift toward an open woodland state comparable to the Early Holocene. Such a shift in forest structure may result in a positive feedback on currently intensifying wildfires. These new long-term data improve our understanding of millennial-scale fire regime changes and their relationships to changes of vegetation in Central Yakutia, where the local population is already being confronted with intensifying wildfire seasons.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 95
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    University of Bremen
    In:  EPIC3University of Bremen, 68 p.
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: The Earth’s climate during the Cretaceous period was characterized by temperatures warmer than today driven by a high CO2 level. Due to the continuous rise in our atmospheric CO2 concentration since the Industrial Revolution, Cretaceous climate is now of particular interest as a suitable analog to our future climate changes. Here, the Cretaceous climate has been investigated using the newly developed AWI-Earth System Model 2 (AWI-ESM-2) with interactive vegetation at different CO2 concentrations. The AWI-ESM-2 employs coupled sub-models of FESOM with unstructured mesh, the ECHAM running on T63 grid and a land surface scheme with interactive vegetation dynamics to produce a reasonable representation of Cretaceous climate and vegetation. The atmospheric CO2 concentrations of 1x, 4x, 6x the PI value (280ppm) with other greenhouse gases (N2O and CH4) fixed at PI levels were used to run three modeling experiments. Results obtained indicated a warmer surface temperature and vanishing of sea ice cover at the two higher CO2 experiments, with the Antarctic summer temperature as warm as 23 °C and a completely ice free Antarctic continent at the CR_6x simulation. At both CR_4x and CR_6x simulations, snow presence was seasonally dependent, with up to 25 cm snow present in the high latitudes at both Austral and Boreal winter, indicating seasonal dependency. The tropics were generally wetter, most especially the summer of CR_6x, while the precipitation level of Antarctica appears similar. Also, the Antarctic mid-Cretaceous terrestrial ecosystem seems to be sensitive to CO2 changes, as the coniferous evergreen forest dominated continent during the CR_1x simulation shifted to a mix of coniferous and extra-tropical evergreen trees under both CR_4x and CR_6x. Additionally, comparing PI and mid-Cretaceous simulations at 280 ppmv and 1120 ppmv shows that CR_4x has an average surface temperature much warmer than PI_4x, especially towards the South Pole. These findings are consistent with the idea that a temperate climate in the high latitude of mid-Cretaceous period requires high CO2 forcing and that permanent ice cannot survive towards the South Pole with an elevated CO2. The interactive vegetation approach also confirms the influence of important feedbacks particularly over ice free Antarctica.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: 〈jats:p〉Persistent cold temperatures, a paucity of nutrients, freeze-thaw cycles, and the strongly seasonal light regime make Antarctica one of Earth’s least hospitable surface environments for complex life. Cyanobacteria, however, are well-adapted to such conditions and are often the dominant primary producers in Antarctic inland water environments. In particular, the network of meltwater ponds on the ‘dirty ice’ of the McMurdo Ice Shelf is an ecosystem with extensive cyanobacteria-dominated microbial mat accumulations. This study investigated intact polar lipids (IPLs), heterocyte glycolipids (HGs), and bacteriohopanepolyols (BHPs) in combination with 16S and 18S rRNA gene diversity in microbial mats of twelve ponds in this unique polar ecosystem. To constrain the effects of nutrient availability, temperature and freeze-thaw cycles on the lipid membrane composition, lipids were compared to stromatolite-forming cyanobacterial mats from ice-covered lakes in the McMurdo Dry Valleys as well as from (sub)tropical regions and hot springs. The 16S rRNA gene compositions of the McMurdo Ice Shelf mats confirm the dominance of Cyanobacteria and Proteobacteria while the 18S rRNA gene composition indicates the presence of Ochrophyta, Chlorophyta, Ciliophora, and other microfauna. IPL analyses revealed a predominantly bacterial community in the meltwater ponds, with archaeal lipids being barely detectable. IPLs are dominated by glycolipids and phospholipids, followed by aminolipids. The high abundance of sugar-bound lipids accords with a predominance of cyanobacterial primary producers. The phosphate-limited samples from the (sub)tropical, hot spring, and Lake Vanda sites revealed a higher abundance of aminolipids compared to those of the nitrogen-limited meltwater ponds, affirming the direct affects that N and P availability have on IPL compositions. The high abundance of polyunsaturated IPLs in the Antarctic microbial mats suggests that these lipids provide an important mechanism to maintain membrane fluidity in cold environments. High abundances of HG keto-ols and HG keto-diols, produced by heterocytous cyanobacteria, further support these findings and reveal a unique distribution compared to those from warmer climates.〈/jats:p〉
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: An ensemble-based data assimilation framework for a coupled ocean–atmosphere model is applied to investigate the influence of assimilating different types of ocean observations on the ocean and atmosphere simulation. The data assimilation is performed with the parallel data assimilation framework (PDAF) for the climate model AWI-CM. Observations of the ocean, namely satellite sea-surface temperature (SST) and temperature and salinity profiles, are assimilated into the ocean component. The atmospheric state is only influenced by the model dynamics. Different assimilation scenarios were carried out with different combinations of observations to investigate to what extent the assimilation into the coupled model leads to a better estimation of the state of the ocean as well as the atmosphere. The influence of the data assimilation is assessed by comparing the ocean prediction with dependent and independent ocean observations. For the atmosphere, the assimilation result is compared with the ERA-Interim atmospheric reanalysis data. The ocean temperature and salinity are improved by all the assimilation scenarios in the coupled system. The assimilation leads to a response of the atmosphere throughout the troposphere and impacts the global atmospheric circulation. Globally the temperature and wind speed are improved in the atmosphere on average.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Marine zooplankton are central components of holistic ecosystem assessments due to their intermediary role in the food chain, linking the base of the food chain with higher trophic levels. As a result, these organisms incorporate the inherent properties and changes occurring atall levels of the marine ecosystem, temporally integrating signatures of physical and chemical conditions. For this reason, zooplankton-based biometrics are widely accepted as useful tools for assessing and monitoring the ecological health and integrity of aquatic systems. The European Marine Strategy Framework Directive (EU-MSFD) requires the use of different types of bio-monitors, including zooplankton, to monitor progress towards achieving specific environmental and water quality targets in EU. However, there is currently no comprehensive synthesis of zooplankton indices development, use, and associated challenges. We addressed this issue with a two-step approach. First, we formulated the indicator-metrics-indices cycle (IMIC) to redefine the closely related but often ambiguously utilized terms - indicator, metric and index, highlighting the convergence between them and the iterative nature of their interaction. Secondly, we formulated frameworks for synthesizing, presenting and systematically applying zooplankton indices based on the IMIC framework. The main benefits of the IMIC are twofold: 1). to disambiguate the key elements: indicators, metrics, and indices, revealing their links to an operational ecological indicator system, and 2) to serve as an organizing tool for the coherent classification of indices according to the MSFD descriptors. Using the IMIC framework, we identified and described two broad categories of indices namely the core biodiversity indices already in use in the Baltic Sea and North Atlantic regions, including the ‘Zooplankton Mean Size and Total Stock (zooplankton MSTS)’ and 'Plankton Lifeforms index (PLI)', and stressor-response indices retrieved from the existing literature, elucidating their applicability to different MSFD descriptors. Finally, major challenges of developing new indices and applying existing ones in the context of the MSFD were critically addressed and some solutions were proposed.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 99
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
    In:  EPIC3Marine Pollution Bulletin, PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD, 184(114162), ISSN: 0025-326X
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: Marine litter can be found along coasts, continental shelves and slopes, down into the abyss. The absence of light, low temperatures and low energy regimes characterising the deeper habitats ensure the persistence of litter over time. Therefore, manmade items within the deep sea will likely accumulate to increasing quantities. Here we report the litter abundance encountered at the Pacific abyssal nodule fields from the Peru Basin at 4150 m depth. An average density of 2.67 litter items/ha was observed. Litter composed of plastic was the most abundant followed by metal and glass. At least 58 % of the items observed could be linked to the research expeditions conducted in the area and appeared to be mostly accidental disposals from ships. The data gathered was used to address temporal trends in litter abundance as well as the impact of human on-site presence and return cruises in the context of future deep-sea mining efforts.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 2023-06-21
    Description: As part of an international project to bring humane slaughtering methods to cephalopod molluscs, the Alfred-Wegener-Institute in Bremerhaven contributes by facilitating a subproject. The overall aim of the international project is to prevent marine animals from experiencing pain and distress during slaughter by improving on current methods. The subproject aims to conceive a proof of concept based on pulse oximetry to measure oxygen saturation in cephalopod molluscs. The created system ought to be the base for prospective hardware to analyse cephalopods during anaesthetized conditions to establish enhanced humane stunning procedures. The creation of a transmissive-based pulse oximeter prototype using Arduino, a physical computing platform, represents a pivotal phase within the scope of this thesis. Furthermore, this thesis deals with the development of a customised calibration method to calculate SpO2 values, an alternative to the previously applied software, that yielded erroneous results. The required data to perform customised calculations were collected from measurements done on test subjects. Finally, the conception of a model for cephalopods is presented based on the outcomes of the prototype. Despite difficulties due to the inconvenient structure of the hardware, general proof of concept for the developed prototype can be declared at the end of the project. Based on these findings the realization of a suitable concept for cephalopods is presumably feasible. This paper is intended to act as a foundation for further advancements toward the non-invasive measurement of oxygen saturation in cephalopods through the application of the theoretical and practical knowledge that was acquired throughout this project.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Thesis , notRev
    Format: application/pdf
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