| Literature DB >> 24204642 |
Philipp Assmy1, Jens K Ehn, Mar Fernández-Méndez, Haakon Hop, Christian Katlein, Arild Sundfjord, Katrin Bluhm, Malin Daase, Anja Engel, Agneta Fransson, Mats A Granskog, Stephen R Hudson, Svein Kristiansen, Marcel Nicolaus, Ilka Peeken, Angelika H H Renner, Gunnar Spreen, Agnieszka Tatarek, Jozef Wiktor.
Abstract
During two consecutive cruises to the Eastern Central Arctic in late summer 2012, we observed floating algal aggregates in the melt-water layer below and between melting ice floes of first-year pack ice. The macroscopic (1-15 cm in diameter) aggregates had a mucous consistency and were dominated by typical ice-associated pennate diatoms embedded within the mucous matrix. Aggregates maintained buoyancy and accumulated just above a strong pycnocline that separated meltwater and seawater layers. We were able, for the first time, to obtain quantitative abundance and biomass estimates of these aggregates. Although their biomass and production on a square metre basis was small compared to ice-algal blooms, the floating ice-algal aggregates supported high levels of biological activity on the scale of the individual aggregate. In addition they constituted a food source for the ice-associated fauna as revealed by pigments indicative of zooplankton grazing, high abundance of naked ciliates, and ice amphipods associated with them. During the Arctic melt season, these floating aggregates likely play an important ecological role in an otherwise impoverished near-surface sea ice environment. Our findings provide important observations and measurements of a unique aggregate-based habitat during the 2012 record sea ice minimum year.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24204642 PMCID: PMC3804104 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0076599
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Ice-algal aggregate observations recorded in the Eastern Central Arctic during the Centre for Ice, Climate and Ecosystems (ICE12) cruise with RV Lance, IceArc expedition ARK-XXVII/3 with RV Polarstern, the Russian North Pole drift station NP-23 and the Fram Expedition 1893-1896.
The broken line and blue colour scale indicate the approximate position of the ice edge at the end of July 2012 and the sea floor depth, respectively.
Figure 2Distribution and composition of ice-algal aggregates.
(A) Mass accumulation of aggregates in open melt pond. (B) Accumulation of aggregates at the interface between melt and seawater layers in a natural crack through the ice. (C) Composite aggregate floating beneath sea ice. (D) Porous aggregate colonized by the ice amphipod species Apherusa glacialis (white) and Onisimus glacialis (yellow). (E) Light micrograph of pennate diatoms, mainly Hantzschia weyprechtii, embedded in the mucous matrix. (F) Light micrograph of mainly empty frustules of different pennate diatom species. Scale bar = 0.5 m(A), 5 cm (C), 1 cm (D) and 20 µm (E and F). In panel B the measuring bar (1 m) lowered into the ice crack in the background serves as a scale for orientation. Picture A © Jenny E. Ross, pictures C and D © Peter Leopold.
Aggregate parameters derived from ROV-dives and POC and PON measurements at the scale of the individual aggregate (mg L-1) and up-scaled to area (mg m-2) at stations Ice1 and Ice2.
| Mean | Median |
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|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abundance | Diameter | POC | PON | Chl | ||||
| Station | (Agg. m-2) | (cm) | (mg C L-1) | (mg C m-2) | (mg N L-1) | (mg N m-2) | (mg L-1) | (mg m-2) |
| Ice1 | 0.79 | 1.04 | 399 | 0.19 | 56 | 0.03 | 3.67 | 0.0017 |
| Ice2 | 5.06 | 0.87 | 873 | 1.33 | 94 | 0.17 | 4.16 | 0.0063 |
| ICE12 | 0.24 | – | – | 0.74 | – | 0.10 | 15 | – |
Aggregate abundance and POC and PON stocks estimated with the “inverted sediment trap” approach during cruise ICE12. See Tables S1 and S2 for details on the ROV-statistics and up-scaling calculations.
Figure 3Aerial photograph (A) of the investigated ice floe during ICE12.
Map (B) and close-up (C) of the 64 km ice floe drift trajectory north of Svalbard. “Inverted sediment trap” ice-algal aggregate POC time series covering the sampling period from 29 July-1 August (D). The red oval highlights RV Lance while the red circle indicates the approximate location of the ice hole. The length of RV Lance (60.8 m) can be used as a scale.
Figure 4Abundance distribution of ice-algal aggregates at stations (A) Ice1 and (B) Ice2 measured with an upward looking camera mounted onto a remotely operated vehicle.
The positions are coordinates (in m) within a floe fixed coordinate system, which was established on both stations.
Net primary productivity (NPP) at the scale of the individual aggregate (mg C m-3 d-1) and up-scaled to a square-metre area (mg C m-2 d-1).
| NPP | Up-scaling NPP | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (mg C m-3 d-1) | (mg C m-2 d-1) | |||
| Ice1 | Ice2 | Ice1 | Ice2 | |
| Aggregate | 3636 | 10304 | 0.002 | 0.02 |
| Melt pond | 8.6 | 0.2 | 8.4 | 0.04 |
| Sea ice | 4.4 | 2.0 | 9.2 | 1.0 |
| Water column | 2.1 | 1.1 | 19.4 | 2.0 |
Depth-integrated water column NPP was calculated for the euphotic zone (1% light depth). Depth-integrated melt pond and sea ice NPP was calculated for the entire pond depth and ice thickness, respectively. See Table S3 for details on the NPP up-scaling calculations.