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Effects of Enhanced UV-B on Sea Ice Algae

From the abstract of some of the papers:


It has been suggested that increased springtime UVB radiation caused by stratospheric ozone depletion is likely to reduce primary production and induce changes in the species composition of Antarctic marine phytoplankton. Experiments conducted at Arthur Harbour in the Antarctic Peninsula revealed a reduction in primary productivity at both ambient and increased levels of UVB. Laboratory studies have shown that most species in culture are sensitive to high UVB levels, although the level at which either growth or photosynthesis is inhibited is variable. Stratospheric ozone depletion, with resultant increased springtime UVB irradiance, has been occurring with increasing severity since the late 1970's. Thus the phytoplankton community has already experienced about 20 years' exposure to increasing levels of UVB radiation. Here we present analyses of diatom assemblages from high-resolution stratigraphic sequences from anoxic basins in fjords of the Vestfold HIlls, Antarctica. We find that compositional changes in the diatom component of the phytoplankton community over the past 20 years cannot be distinguished from long-term natural variability, although there is some indication of a decline in the production of some sea-ice diatoms. We anticipate that our results are applicable to other Antarctic coastal regions, where thick ice cover and the timing of the phytoplankton bloom protect the phytoplankton from the effects of increased UVB radiation.


Growth rate, survival, and stimulation of the production of UV-B (280 to 320 nm) absorbing compounds were investigated in cultures of five commonly occurring Antarctic marine diatoms exposed to a range of UV-B irradiances. Experimental UV-B exposures ranged from 20 to 650% of the measured peak surface irradiance at an Antarctic coastal site (0.533 J per square metre per second). The five diatom species (Nitzschia lecointei, Proboscia alata, P. inermis, Thalassiosira tumida and Stellarima microtrias) appear capable of surviving two to four times this irradiance. In contrast to Phaeocystis cf. pouchetti, another major component of the Antarctic phytoplankton, the concentrations of pigments with discrete UV absorption peaks in diatoms were low and did not change significantly under increasing UV-B irradiance. Absorbance of UV-B by cells from which pigments had been extracted commonly exceeded that of the pigments themselves. Most of this absorbance was due to oxidisable cell contents, with the frustule providing the remainder. Survival of diatoms did not correlate with absorption by either pigments, frustules or oxidisable cell contents, indicating that their survival under elevated UV-B irradiances results from processes other than screening mechanisms.


Springtime UV-B levels have been increasing in Antarctic marine ecosystems since the 1970's. Effects on natural phytoplankton and sea-ice algal communities, however, remain unresolved. At the Marginal Ice Edge Zone, enhanced springtime UV-B levels coincide with a shallow, stratified water column and a major phytoplankton bloom. In these areas it is possible that phytoplankton growth and survival is adversely impacted by enhanced UV-B. In coastal areas, however, the sea ice, which attenuates most of the UV-B before it reaches the water column, remains until December/January, by which time UV-B levels have returned to long-term seasonal averages. Phytoplankton from these areas are unlikely to show long-term changes resulting from the hole in the ozone layer. Fjords of the Vestfold Hills, eastern Antarctica, have anoxic basins which contain high-resolution, unbioturbated sedimentary sequences. Diatom assemblages from these sequences reflect the diatom component of the phytoplankton and sea-ice algal assemblages at the time of deposition. Twenty-year records from these sequences show no consistent record of change in species composition, diversity or species richness. Six-hundred-year records from the same area also show changes in species abundance greater than those seen in the last 20 years. From these records it can be seen that recent changes in diatom abundances generally fall within the limits of natural variability and there is little evidence of recent changes that might be associated with UV-B-induced change.

Simple

Identification info

Alternate title
Effects of Enhanced UV-B on Sea Ice Algae
Date (Publication)
2000-08-07
Edition
1

Originator

McMinn, A.

Publisher

Australian Antarctic Data Centre

Principal investigator

MCMINN, ANDREW
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
University of Tasmania
Private Bag 77
Hobart
Tasmania
7001
Australia
+61 3 6266 2980
+61 3 6226 2973 (facsimile)

Collaborator

MCMINN, ANDREW
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
University of Tasmania
Private Bag 77
Hobart
Tasmania
7001
Australia
+61 3 6266 2980
+61 3 6226 2973 (facsimile)
Name
CAASM Metadata
Other citation details
Restricted access
Website
https://data.aad.gov.au/metadata/records/ASAC_765

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
1971-01-01 1991-12-31
Title
Minimal effects of UV-B on Antarctic diatoms over the past 20 yr
Date (Publication)
1994
Citation identifier
370

Author

McMinn, A., Heijnis, H., Hodgson, D.
Name
Nature
Page
547-549
Title
Species succession in fast ice algal communities; a response to UV-B radiation?
Date (Publication)
1998
Citation identifier
8

Author

McMinn, A.
Name
Korean Journal of Polar Research
Page
47-52
Title
Effects of UV-B irradiation on growth and survival of Antarctic marine diatoms
Date (Publication)
1994
Citation identifier
119

Author

Davidson, A.T., Bramich, D., Marchant, H.J., and McMinn, A.
Name
Marine Biology
Page
507-515
Title
Preliminary sediment core evidence against short-term, UV-B induced changes in Antarctic coastal diatom communities
Date (Publication)
1997

Author

McMinn, A., Heijnis, H., Hodgson, D.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press
Cambridge
Name
Antarctic communities: species, structure and survival. Battaglia, B., Valencia, J. and Walton, D.W.H. (eds)
Page
381-387
NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
  • EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > ATMOSPHERIC RADIATION > ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION
  • EARTH SCIENCE > OCEANS > OCEAN CHEMISTRY > PIGMENTS
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION > PROTISTS > DIATOMS
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION > PLANTS > MICROALGAE
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION > PLANTS
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION > PLANTS
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOLOGICAL CLASSIFICATION > PLANTS > MICROALGAE > DIATOMS
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOSPHERE > AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS > PLANKTON > PHYTOPLANKTON
  • EARTH SCIENCE > ATMOSPHERE > ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY > OXYGEN COMPOUNDS > OZONE
  • EARTH SCIENCE > BIOSPHERE > ECOLOGICAL DYNAMICS > SPECIES/POPULATION INTERACTIONS > SURVIVAL RATES
Keywords
  • ANOXIC
  • ANTARCTIC PENINSULA
  • ANTARCTICA
  • DIATOMS
  • GROWTH RATE
  • OZONE
  • PHYTOPLANKTON
  • PIGMENTS
  • SURVIVAL
  • ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION
  • UV
  • UV-B
  • VESTFOLD HILLS
NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
  • AMD/AU
  • CEOS
  • AMD
NASA/GCMD Earth Science Keywords
  • CONTINENT > ANTARCTICA
  • GEOGRAPHIC REGION > POLAR

Resource constraints

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This metadata record is publicly available.

Resource constraints

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licence
Other constraints
PDF's of the papers produced from this project are available for download from the provided URL 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_765 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
Units of distribution
KB
Transfer size
6059
Distribution format
  • PDF

OnLine resource
PROJECT HOME PAGE

Public information for ASAC project 765

OnLine resource
VIEW RELATED INFORMATION > PUBLICATIONS

Download point for the papers - AAD Staff Only

OnLine resource
VIEW RELATED INFORMATION

Citation reference for this metadata record and dataset

Resource lineage

Statement
Dates provided in temporal coverage are approximate only.
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Maintenance and update frequency
As needed
Maintenance note
2011-11-23 - record updated by Dave Connell - minor adjustments. 2016-12-06 - record updated by Dave Connell - basic updates.

Metadata

Metadata identifier
string/ASAC_765

Language
English
Character encoding
UTF8

Author

MCMINN, ANDREW
Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
University of Tasmania
Private Bag 77
Hobart
Tasmania
7001
Australia
+61 3 6266 2980
+61 3 6226 2973 (facsimile)

Sponsor

Australian Antarctic Division

Owner

AADC

Type of resource

Resource scope
Dataset

Alternative metadata reference

Title
gov.nasa.gsfc.gcmd
Citation identifier
05b7901c-9164-47e2-a980-1bde3f08d0a3

Alternative metadata reference

Title
gov.nasa.gsfc.gcmd
Date (Last Revision)
2015-04-08T11:19:17

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_765

Point of truth for the metadata record

Date info (Creation)
2000-08-07T00:00:00
Date info (Last Update)
2017-04-26

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


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