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Kelp rafts in the Southern Ocean: intercontinental travel for sessile and semi-sessile organisms.

Metadata record for data from ASAC Project 2914

See the link below for public details on this project.


Can animals raft between countries on floating seaweed? We aim to answer that question using powerful genetic tools. We can tell whether gene flow is strong between populations of animals by comparing their mitochondrial DNA; this could show us whether animals from one species in New Zealand are isolated from individuals of the same species in Chile. If they are not isolated, how are they managing to maintain gene flow? We know there are many millions of clumps of floating seaweed in the Southern Ocean, and these might provide a means of intercontinental travel for a range of small invertebrates.


Project objectives:

The primary objective of the project is to determine the effectiveness of rafting as a dispersal mechanism for sessile and semi-sessile organisms around the Southern Ocean using genetic tools.


The secondary objectives, by which the primary objective will be addressed, are:


- to examine the biogeography of bull kelp (Durvillaea antarctica) and its holdfast fauna around the Southern Ocean


- to undertake genetic analysis of a wide range of macroalgal (seaweed) species throughout the Southern Ocean to assess 1) whether sea ice indeed extended further north than previously believed, and 2) the ecological and evolutionary impacts of historic ice scour on Southern Ocean islands.


- to determine which holdfast invertebrates are the most common and ubiquitous in holdfasts of Durvillaea antarctica around the Southern Ocean


- to compare the genetic structure of populations of both the kelp itself, and select invertebrate taxa* from its holdfasts, on a number of spatial scales:

--- genetic variation at HOLDFAST level: are members of a single species, e.g., the isopod Limnoria stephenseni, closely related within a single holdfast?

--- genetic variation at SITE level: are members of a single species, e.g., Durvillaea antarctica itself, closely related at one site? In this case, a 'site' means a single intertidal rock platform.

--- genetic variation at NATIONAL level: are there distinct biogeographic separations of species, or does a single species show distinct genetic disjunction, along the Chilean coastline and around the south island of New Zealand?

--- genetic variation at OCEAN level: are species clearly connected (by gene flow) between Southern Ocean landmasses? The landmasses of interest are: Chile, New Zealand, and the subantarctic islands on which Durvillaea antarctica grows.


* The proposed taxa that this project will focus on are: the isopod genus Limnoria; the amphipod Parawaldeckia kidderi; the chiton genus Onithochiton; the polychaete worm families Terebellidae and Syllidae; a topshell; a bivalve; barnacles.


Progress against objectives:


Considerable progress has been made against the primary objective since the start of the project in 2006. We have collected (/ been sent) and analysed samples of bull-kelp (Durvillaea antarctica) and its associated invertebrate holdfast fauna from numerous sites around the Southern Ocean (subantarctic islands including Macquarie, Gough, Marion, Kerguelen, Crozet, Auckland, Antipodes, Campbell, Falkland Islands; along the coasts of New Zealand and Chile). Our results thus far have allowed us to determine not only that rafting facilitates long-distance dispersal of these otherwise sedentary taxa, but also that sea ice during the last ice ice likely had significant impacts on subantarctic intertidal ecosystems. Our conclusions have been published in several papers in high-impact journals.


The secondary objectives, by which the primary objective will be addressed, are:


- to examine the biogeography of bull kelp (Durvillaea antarctica) and its holdfast fauna - these objectives have now largely been achieved, and results published.


- to undertake genetic analysis of a wide range of macroalgal (seaweed) species throughout the Southern Ocean - this part of the project is ongoing, and will make use of samples collected over the austral summer from Macquarie Island (and other locations around the southern hemisphere). all samples have now been collected and are being processed in the laboratory.


- to determine which holdfast invertebrates are the most common and ubiquitous - this objective has been partially achieved (see Nikula et al. 2010), but research is ongoing.


- to compare the genetic structure of populations of both the kelp itself, and select invertebrate taxa from its holdfasts, on a number of spatial scales - this objective has been partially achieved (see Nikula et al. 2010 for results of Limnoria and Parawaldeckia genetic research) but additional research on these and other taxa continues.


The download file contains an excel spreadsheet detailing collection locations and accession numbers for the samples collected on Macquarie Island. A text document providing accession numbers for non-Antarctic related samples used in this project is also part of the download file.

Simple

Identification info

Alternate title
Kelp rafts in the Southern Ocean: intercontinental travel for sessile and semi-sessile organisms.
Date (Publication)
2016-08-29
Edition
2
Citation identifier
Dataset DOI

Title
Information and documentation - Digital object identifier system
Date (Publication)
2012-04-23
Citation identifier
ISO 26324:2012

Citation identifier
doi:10.26179/5b63dcf42affd

Originator

Waters, J.

Publisher

Australian Antarctic Data Centre

Principal investigator

WATERS, JON
Department of Zoology
University of Otago
Dunedin
OTAGO
9001
New Zealand
+64 3 479 5847

Collaborator

WATERS, JON
Department of Zoology
University of Otago
Dunedin
OTAGO
9001
New Zealand
+64 3 479 5847
Name
CAASM Metadata
Website
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2914

Status
Completed

Custodian

AU/AADC > Australian Antarctic Data Centre, Australia - AADC, DATA OFFICER (DATA CENTER CONTACT)
Australian Antarctic Division
203 Channel Highway
Kingston
Tasmania
7050
Australia
+61 3 6232 3244
+61 3 6232 3351 (facsimile)
Topic category
  • Biota
  • Oceans

Extent

N
S
E
W


Extent

Description
Temporal Coverage

Temporal extent

TimePeriod
2010-03-25 2010-03-25
Title
Circumpolar dispersal by rafting in two subantarctic kelp-dwelling crustaceans.
Date (Publication)
2010
Citation identifier
405

Author

Nikula R, Fraser CI, Spencer HG, Waters JM
Name
Marine Ecology-Progress Series
Page
221-230
Title
Glacial oceanographic contrasts explain phylogeography of Australian bull kelp.
Date (Publication)
2009
Citation identifier
18

Author

Fraser CI, Spencer HG and Waters JM
Name
Molecular Ecology
Page
2287-2296
Title
Genetic and morphological analyses of the southern bull kelp Durvillaea antarctica (Phaeophyceae: Durvillaeales) in New Zealand reveal cryptic species
Date (Publication)
2009
Citation identifier
45

Author

Fraser, CI, Hay, CH, Spencer, HG and Waters, JM
Name
Journal of Phycology
Page
436-443
Title
Kelp genes reveal effects of subantarctic sea ice during the Last Glacial Maximum.
Date (Publication)
2009
Citation identifier
106

Author

Fraser CI, Nikula, R, Spencer HG and Waters JM
Name
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA
Page
3249-3253
Title
Genetic Affinities between Trans-Oceanic Populations of NonBuoyant Macroalgae in the High Latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere
Date (Publication)
2013
Citation identifier
8

Citation identifier
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0069138

Author

Fraser CI, Zuccarello GC, Spencer HG, Salvatore LC, Garcia GR, et al.
Name
PLoS ONE
Issue identification
7
Page
e69138
NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
  • EARTH SCIENCE > OCEANS > OCEAN CIRCULATION > OCEAN CURRENTS
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION > ANIMALS/INVERTEBRATES
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION > PLANTS > MACROALGAE (SEAWEEDS)
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOSPHERE > ECOSYSTEMS > AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOSPHERE > ECOSYSTEMS > MARINE ECOSYSTEMS
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOSPHERE > ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS > SPECIES/POPULATION INTERACTIONS > MIGRATORY RATES/ROUTES
Keywords
  • kelp
  • rafts
  • sessile
  • semi-sessile
  • dispersal
NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
  • ADS > Automated DNA Sequencer
NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
  • LABORATORY
NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
  • AMD/AU
  • CEOS
  • AMD
NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
  • OCEAN > SOUTHERN OCEAN
  • OCEAN > SOUTHERN OCEAN > MACQUARIE ISLAND
  • GEOGRAPHIC REGION > POLAR

Resource constraints

Use limitation
This metadata record is publicly available.

Resource constraints

Access constraints
licence
Other constraints
These data are publicly available for download from the provided URL. Genetic data can be accessed from Genbank using the accession numbers from the download file. A copy of one of the referenced publications is available for download to AAD staff only.

Resource constraints

File type
Portable Network Graphic
Linkage
Creative Commons by Attribution logo

Title
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Website
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode

Legal code for Creative Commons by Attribution 4.0 International license

Use constraints
licence
Other constraints
This data set conforms to the CCBY Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Please follow instructions listed in the citation reference provided at http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/metadata/citation.cfm?entry_id=ASAC_2914 when using these data.
Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Distribution Information

Distributor

Distributor

AU/AADC > Australian Antarctic Data Centre, Australia - AADC, DATA OFFICER (DATA CENTER CONTACT)
Australian Antarctic Division
203 Channel Highway
Kingston
Tasmania
7050
Australia
+61 3 6232 3244
+61 3 6232 3351 (facsimile)

Distributor

Fees
Free
Planned available datetime
2016-08-29T00:00:00

Distributor

Fees
Free
Planned available datetime
2016-08-29T00:00:00
Units of distribution
kb
Transfer size
12
Distribution format
  • Excel, csv

Units of distribution
MB
Transfer size
1.2
Distribution format
  • PDF

OnLine resource
GET DATA

Download point for the data

OnLine resource
GET DATA

Genbank Website

OnLine resource
PROJECT HOME PAGE

Public information for ASAC project 2914

OnLine resource
VIEW RELATED INFORMATION > PUBLICATIONS

Download point for the publication - AAD Staff Only

OnLine resource
VIEW RELATED INFORMATION

Citation reference for this metadata record and dataset

Resource lineage

Statement
The figures provided in temporal and spatial coverage are approximate only. Taken from the 2009-2010 progress report: Field work: During the 2009/2010 season, Dr James Doube and other AAD personnel based at Macquarie Island were able to collect the macroalgal samples we requested. Field work was undertaken at two sites close to the Base: one on the east coast (Garden Cove, 57F 0496283 3960990) and one on the west coast (Cosray Rocks, 57F 0495752 3960973). Fieldwork involved collection of small samples of intertidal seaweeds (macroalgae) from rock platforms at Macquarie Islands. Samples were preserved in ethanol, and couriered to our department at the University of Otago. These samples were received on 14 May 2010, and are now being processed in the laboratory. Field work for the broader project is ongoing - however, during the 2009 / 2010 summer, we collected (or were sent) samples from: - the Falkland Islands - central Chile - southern Chile (fiordland) - the New Zealand subantarctic (Campbell, Auckland, Snares, Antipodes and Bounty Islands) - Kerguelen Island - Marion Island - Gough Island - Tasmania, Australia Difficulties affecting project: Not all target species of seaweed were obtained from all collection sites (both at Macquarie Is and elsewhere) - however, on the whole we have obtained most of our target taxa from a broad range of subantarctic locations. Note from AADC, 2018-08-03: The original datasheet was reformatted to fit OBIS/GBFI/IPT Biodiversity.AQ standardS. The new datasheet "KelpRafts.csv" provides the dataset from Macquarie Island samples. Contains datasetID, occurrenceID, event date, decimal latitude, decimal longitude. The lowest taxonomical rank of the species identified that could be determined is provided, after matched in WoRMS (World Register of Marine Species). As the data is genetics identification the associatedSequence and associatedReferences are provided.
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Maintenance and update frequency
As needed
Maintenance note
2007-11-14 - record updated by Dave Connell (Use constraints added). 2010-07-05 - record updated by Dave Connell from information provided in the progress report. 2011-11-10 - record updated by Dave Connell to attach data provided by Cerwiden Fraser. 2011-11-14 - record updated by Dave Connell after additional information was provided by Cerwiden Fraser. 2016-08-26 - record updated by Dave Connell - basic updates. 2016-08-29 - record updated by Dave Connell to release the data. 2018-08-03 - record updated by Dave Connell after a reformatted dataset was provided by Daniela Farias.

Metadata

Metadata identifier
string/ASAC_2914

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Author

WATERS, JON
Department of Zoology
University of Otago
Dunedin
OTAGO
9001
New Zealand
+64 3 479 5847

Sponsor

Australian Antarctic Division

Owner

AADC

Type of resource

Resource scope
Dataset

Alternative metadata reference

Title
gov.nasa.gsfc.gcmd
Citation identifier
e4002688-21c5-49a8-84ce-ffbf3040eb86

Alternative metadata reference

Title
gov.nasa.gsfc.gcmd
Date (Last Revision)
2015-11-29T18:40:56

Identifier

Description
metadata.extraction_date

Alternative metadata reference

Title
gov.nasa.gsfc.gcmd
Citation identifier
8.6

Metadata linkage
http://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_2914

Point of truth for the metadata record

Date info (Creation)
2007-04-26T00:00:00
Date info (Last Update)
2018-08-03

Metadata standard

Title
ISO 19115-3
Edition
2014
Other citation details
Version 1
Title
DIF to ISO 19115-1 Profile
 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

N
S
E
W


Keywords


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Associated resources

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