204 results match your criteria: "Helmholtz Center for Polar- and Marine Research[Affiliation]"
Oecologia
October 2021
British Antarctic Survey, High Cross, Madingley road, Cambridge, UK.
Sexual segregation, the differential space, habitat or resource use by males and females, can have profound implications for conservation, as one sex may be more vulnerable to environmental and anthropogenic stressors. The drivers of sexual segregation, such as sex differences in body size, breeding constraints, and social behaviour, have been well studied in adults but are poorly understood in immature animals. To determine whether sexual segregation occurs in juvenile Antarctic fur seals, Arctocephalus gazella, and investigate the underlying drivers, we deployed Global Location Sensors on 26 males and 19 females of 1-3 years of age at Bird Island, South Georgia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
July 2021
Lake Group & Arctic Research Centre, Department of Bioscience, Aarhus University, Roskilde, Silkeborg, Denmark.
High Arctic ecosystems and Indigenous livelihoods are tightly linked and exposed to climate change, yet assessing their sensitivity requires a long-term perspective. Here, we assess the vulnerability of the North Water polynya, a unique seaice ecosystem that sustains the world's northernmost Inuit communities and several keystone Arctic species. We reconstruct mid-to-late Holocene changes in sea ice, marine primary production, and little auk colony dynamics through multi-proxy analysis of marine and lake sediment cores.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
July 2021
CCMAR ‑ Center of Marine Sciences, University of Algarve, Campus Gambelas, 8005‑139, Faro, Portugal.
Science
July 2021
Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Bremen 28359, Germany.
Ethane, the second most abundant hydrocarbon gas in the seafloor, is efficiently oxidized by anaerobic archaea in syntrophy with sulfate-reducing bacteria. Here, we report the 0.99-angstrom-resolution structure of the proposed ethane-activating enzyme and describe the specific traits that distinguish it from methane-generating and -consuming methyl-coenzyme M reductases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNature
July 2021
Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
The Laacher See eruption (LSE) in Germany ranks among Europe's largest volcanic events of the Upper Pleistocene. Although tephra deposits of the LSE represent an important isochron for the synchronization of proxy archives at the Late Glacial to Early Holocene transition, uncertainty in the age of the eruption has prevailed. Here we present dendrochronological and radiocarbon measurements of subfossil trees that were buried by pyroclastic deposits that firmly date the LSE to 13,006 ± 9 calibrated years before present (BP; taken as AD 1950), which is more than a century earlier than previously accepted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmSphere
June 2021
Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemuende, Biological Oceanography, Rostock, Germany.
While it is now appreciated that the millions of tons of plastic pollution travelling through marine systems carry complex communities of microorganisms, it is still unknown to what extent these biofilm communities are specific to the plastic or selected by the surrounding ecosystem. To address this, we characterized and compared the microbial communities of microplastic particles, nonplastic (natural and wax) particles, and the surrounding waters from three marine ecosystems (the Baltic, Sargasso and Mediterranean seas) using high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing. We found that biofilm communities on microplastic and nonplastic particles were highly similar to one another across this broad geographical range.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISME J
December 2021
Hadal & Nordcee, Department of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark.
Hadal trench sediments are hotspots of biogeochemical activity in the deep sea, but the biogeochemical and ecological factors that shape benthic hadal microbial communities remain unknown. Here, we sampled ten hadal sites from two trench regions with a vertical resolution of down to 1 cm. We sequenced 16S rRNA gene amplicons using universal and archaea-specific primer sets and compared the results to biogeochemical parameters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
July 2021
Marine Botany, University of Bremen, Bibliothekstraße 1, 28359 Bremen, Germany; Ecological Chemistry, Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research, Am Handelshafen 12, 27570 Bremerhaven, Germany.
Over the last decades, it has been reported that the habitat of the Southern Ocean (SO) key species Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) has contracted to high latitudes, putatively due to reduced winter sea ice coverage, while salps as Salpa thompsoni have extended their dispersal to the former krill habitats. To date, the potential implications of this population shift on the biogeochemical cycling of the limiting micronutrient iron (Fe) and its bioavailability to SO phytoplankton has never been tested. Based on uptake of fecal pellet (FP)-released Fe by SO phytoplankton, this study highlights how efficiently krill and salps recycle Fe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnaerobic oxidation of ammonium (anammox) in oxygen minimum zones (OMZs) is a major pathway of oceanic nitrogen loss. Ammonium released from sinking particles has been suggested to fuel this process. During cruises to the Peruvian OMZ in April-June 2017 we found that anammox rates are strongly correlated with the volume of small particles (128-512 µm), even though anammox bacteria were not directly associated with particles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
May 2021
CCMAR - Center of Marine Sciences, University of Algarve, Campus Gambelas, 8005-139, Faro, Portugal.
Rhodolith beds built by free-living coralline algae are important ecosystems for marine biodiversity and carbonate production. Yet, our mechanistic understanding regarding rhodolith physiology and its drivers is still limited. Using three rhodolith species with different branching morphologies, we investigated the role of morphology in species' physiology and the implications for their susceptibility to ocean acidification (OA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Arctic is impacted by climate warming faster than any other oceanic region on Earth. Assessing the baseline of microbial communities in this rapidly changing ecosystem is vital for understanding the implications of ocean warming and sea ice retreat on ecosystem functioning. Using CARD-FISH and semi-automated counting, we quantified 14 ecologically relevant taxonomic groups of bacterioplankton ( and ) from surface (0-30 m) down to deep waters (2,500 m) in summer ice-covered and ice-free regions of the Fram Strait, the main gateway for Atlantic inflow into the Arctic Ocean.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
May 2021
Department of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, HADAL and Nordcee, 5230, Odense M, Denmark.
Ocean sediments are the largest sink for mercury (Hg) sequestration and hence an important part of the global Hg cycle. Yet accepted global average Hg flux data for deep-ocean sediments (> 200 m depth) are not based on measurements on sediments but are inferred from sinking particulates. Mercury fluxes have never been reported from the deepest zone, the hadal (> 6 km depth).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Biodivers
May 2021
School of Natural and Environmental Sciences, Newcastle University, Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE1 7RU UK.
S.I. Smith in Scudder, 1882 (Crustacea: Amphipoda) are prevalent scavengers of the benthopelagic community from bathyal to hadal depths.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
May 2021
Sorbonne Université, CNRS, Laboratoire d'Océanographie de Villefranche, LOV, Villefranche-sur-Mer, France.
The organic carbon produced in the ocean's surface by phytoplankton is either passed through the food web or exported to the ocean interior as marine snow. The rate and efficiency of such vertical export strongly depend on the size, structure and shape of individual particles, but apart from size, other morphological properties are still not quantitatively monitored. With the growing number of in situ imaging technologies, there is now a great possibility to analyze the morphology of individual marine snow.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Chang Biol
September 2021
Department of Geosciences and Geography, Faculty of Science, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
The regional variability in tundra and boreal carbon dioxide (CO ) fluxes can be high, complicating efforts to quantify sink-source patterns across the entire region. Statistical models are increasingly used to predict (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol Resour
August 2021
German Centre for Marine Biodiversity Research (DZMB), Senckenberg Research Institute, Hamburg, Germany.
Accurate and reliable biodiversity estimates of marine zooplankton are a prerequisite to understand how changes in diversity can affect whole ecosystems. Species identification in the deep sea is significantly impeded by high numbers of new species and decreasing numbers of taxonomic experts, hampering any assessment of biodiversity. We used in parallel morphological, genetic, and proteomic characteristics of specimens of calanoid copepods from the abyssal South Atlantic to test if proteomic fingerprinting can accelerate estimating biodiversity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConserv Physiol
April 2021
Securing Antarctica's Environmental Future, School of Biological Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria 3800, Australia.
Glob Chang Biol
June 2021
Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research, Permafrost Research Section, Potsdam, Germany.
Permafrost thaw leads to thermokarst lake formation and talik growth tens of meters deep, enabling microbial decomposition of formerly frozen organic matter (OM). We analyzed two 17-m-long thermokarst lake sediment cores taken in Central Yakutia, Russia. One core was from an Alas lake in a Holocene thermokarst basin that underwent multiple lake generations, and the second core from a young Yedoma upland lake (formed ~70 years ago) whose sediments have thawed for the first time since deposition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
June 2021
Alfred-Wegener-Institute, Helmholtz-Center for Polar and Marine Research, 27570 Bremerhaven, Germany.
Despite climate-change challenges, for most aquaculture species, physiological responses to different salinities during ambient extreme cold events remain unknown. Here, European seabass acclimatized at 3, 6, 12, and 30 PSU were subjected to 20 days of an ambient extreme winter cold event (8 °C), and monitored for growth and physiological performance. Growth performance decreased significantly (p < 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
February 2021
Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, Germany.
The evolution of past global ice sheets is highly uncertain. One example is the missing ice problem during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, 26 000-19 000 years before present) - an apparent 8-28 m discrepancy between far-field sea level indicators and modelled sea level from ice sheet reconstructions. In the absence of ice sheet reconstructions, researchers often use marine δO proxy records to infer ice volume prior to the LGM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
February 2021
Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, 28359, Bremen, Germany.
The formation of sinking particles in the ocean, which promote carbon sequestration into deeper water and sediments, involves algal polysaccharides acting as an adhesive, binding together molecules, cells and minerals. These as yet unidentified adhesive polysaccharides must resist degradation by bacterial enzymes or else they dissolve and particles disassemble before exporting carbon. Here, using monoclonal antibodies as analytical tools, we trace the abundance of 27 polysaccharide epitopes in dissolved and particulate organic matter during a series of diatom blooms in the North Sea, and discover a fucose-containing sulphated polysaccharide (FCSP) that resists enzymatic degradation, accumulates and aggregates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Chang Biol
May 2021
Alfred Wegener Institute Helmholtz Center for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, Germany.
In recent decades, the central Arctic Ocean has been experiencing dramatic decline in sea ice coverage, thickness and extent, which is expected to have a tremendous impact on all levels of Arctic marine life. Here, we analyze the regional and temporal changes in pan-Arctic distribution and population structure of the key zooplankton species Calanus glacialis and C. hyperboreus in relation to recent changes in ice conditions, based on historical (1993-1998) and recent (2007-2016) zooplankton collections and satellite-based sea ice observations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrief Bioinform
September 2021
Ruhr University Bochum, Faculty of Medicine, Medizinisches Proteom-Center, Bochum, Germany.
This article describes some use case studies and self-assessments of FAIR status of de.NBI services to illustrate the challenges and requirements for the definition of the needs of adhering to the FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable) data principles in a large distributed bioinformatics infrastructure. We address the challenge of heterogeneity of wet lab technologies, data, metadata, software, computational workflows and the levels of implementation and monitoring of FAIR principles within the different bioinformatics sub-disciplines joint in de.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms
January 2021
Marine Institute, Rinville, Oranmore, H91 R673 Co. Galway, Ireland.