Spatial distribution of Antarctic shrimps (Crustacea: Decapoda) by underwater photography

1991 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 363-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Gutt ◽  
M. Gorny ◽  
W. Arntz

Three species of shrimps (Notocrangon antarcticus, Chorismus antarcticus, Nematocarcinus lanceopes) were investigated in the south-eastern Weddell Sea using of underwater photography. Maximum densities of c. 100 specimens per 100 m2 were found for N. antarcticus on the continental shelf (200–600 m) and for N. lanceopes on the slope (800–1200 m). Small-scale dispersion patterns and size-frequency distributions were analyzed within dense concentrations. These direct observations indicate that the behaviour of the three species is adapted to different habitats with Chorismus distribution correlated with that of sponges and Notocrangon with base sediment.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elise Droste ◽  
Melchor González Dávila ◽  
Juana Magdalena Santana Casiano ◽  
Mario Hoppema ◽  
Gerd Rohardt ◽  
...  

<p>Tides have a large impact on coastal polynyas around Antarctica. We investigate the effect of semi-diurnal tidal cycles on the seawater carbonate chemistry in a coastal polynya hugging the Ekström Ice Shelf in the south-eastern Weddell Sea. This region experiences some of the strongest tides in the Southern Ocean. We assess the implications for the contribution of coastal polynyas to the carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>) air-sea flux of the Weddell Sea.</p><p>Two site visits, in January 2015 and January 2019, are intercompared in terms of the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) concentration, total alkalinity, pH, and CO<sub>2</sub> partial pressure (pCO<sub>2</sub>). The tides induce large variability in the carbonate chemistry of the coastal polynya in the austral summer: DIC concentrations vary between 2174 and 2223 umol kg<sup>-1</sup>.</p><p>The tidal fluctuation in the DIC concentration can swing the polynya from a sink to a source of atmospheric CO<sub>2 </sub>on a semi-diurnal timescale. We attribute these changes to the mixing of different water masses. The amount of variability induced by tides depends on – and is associated with – large scale oceanographic and biogeochemical processes that affect the characteristics and presence of the water masses being mixed, such as the rate of sea ice melt.</p><p>Sampling strategies in Antarctic coastal polynyas should always take tidal influences into account. This would help to reduce biases in our understanding of how coastal polynyas contribute to the CO<sub>2</sub> uptake by the Southern Ocean.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonardo Azevedo ◽  
João Narciso ◽  
Ellen Van De Vijver

<p>The near surface is a complex and often highly heterogeneous system as its current status results from interacting processes of both natural and anthropogenic origin. Effective sustainable management and land use planning, especially in urban environments, demands high-resolution subsurface property models enabling to capture small-scale processes of interest. The modelling methods based only on discrete direct observations from conventional invasive sampling techniques have limitations with respect to capturing the spatial variability of these systems. Near-surface geophysical surveys are emerging as powerful techniques to provide indirect measurements of subsurface properties. Their integration with direct observations has the potential for better predicting the spatial distribution of the subsurface physical properties of interest and capture the heterogeneities of the near-surface systems.</p><p>Within the most common geophysical techniques, frequency-domain electromagnetic (FDEM) induction methods have demonstrated their potential and efficiency to characterize heterogeneous deposits due to their simultaneous sensitivity to electrical conductivity (EC) and magnetic susceptibility (MS). The inverse modelling of FDEM data based on geostatistical techniques allows to go beyond conventional analyses of FDEM data. This geostatistical FDEM inversion method uses stochastic sequential simulation and co-simulation to perturbate the model parameter space and the corresponding FDEM forward model solutions, including both the synthetic FDEM responses and their sensitivity to changes on the physical properties of interest. A stochastic optimization driven by the misfit between true and synthetic FDEM data is applied to iterative towards a final subsurface model. This method not only improve the confidence of the obtained EC and MS inverted models but also allows to quantify the uncertainty related to them. Furthermore, taking into account spatial correlations enables more accurate prediction of the spatial distribution of subsurface properties and a more realistic reconstruction of small-scale spatial variations, even when considering highly heterogeneous near surface systems. Moreover, a main advantage of this iterative geostatistical FDEM inversion method is its ability to flexibly integrate data with different resolution in the same framework.</p><p>In this work, we apply this iterative geostatistical FDEM inversion technique, which has already been successfully demonstrated for one- and two-dimensional applications, to invert a real case FDEM data set in three dimensions. The FDEM survey data set was collected on a site located near Knowlton (Dorset, UK), which is geologically characterized by Cretaceous chalk overlain by Quaternary siliciclastic sand deposits. The subsurface at the site is known to contain several archaeological features, which produces strong local in-phase anomalies in the FDEM survey data. We discuss the particular challenges involved in the three-dimensional application of the inversion method to a real case data set and compare our results against previously obtained ones for one- and two-dimensional approximations.</p>


1995 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 227-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Gutt ◽  
Vladimir M. Koltun

Seventy-three sponge species were caught at 23 stations on the continental shelf of the Lazarev and Weddell Sea (Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean). Tedania tantula was the most often found species amongst the 63 demosponge species caught and among the five hexactinellid species Rossella racovitzae was most common. The stations were classified according to their species inventory, and so the individual stations of the resulting four groups were rather uniformly dispersed over the entire investigation area. The species composition of adjacent stations varied considerably. There was no discernible relationship between the biological set of data and any combination of the available environmental characteristics of the stations. The sponge fauna of the, so far very poorly investigated, Lazarev Sea did not differ considerably from that of the adjacent Weddell Sea. The only species to be recorded for the first time on the Antarctic continental shelf were Homaxinella flagelliformis and Hyrtios arenosa. Small scale environmental events such as iceberg scouring, or biological characteristics such as extremely slow growth and budding reproduction are thought to generate the patchy distribution pattern.


2002 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katrin Linse ◽  
Angelika Brandt ◽  
Brigitte Hilbig ◽  
Gisela Wegener

Composition, abundance, and distribution of suprabenthos from a depth between 1 and 1.33 m above the seafloor were analysed. The samples were taken during ANT XV/3 with RV Polarstern in February and March 1998 by means of the supranet of an epibenthic sledge along two transects in the southern Weddell Sea (Vestkapp and Halley Bay) and one east of King George Island. At each of these three transects, five to six stations were taken in water depth between 200 and 2000 m. In total, 34 057 specimens were sampled at 16 stations, yielding 1 205 050 individuals for all stations standardized to 1000 m3 hauls. Of these, copepods were usually the most abundant group in the supranet (805 822 ind 1000 m−3. The suprabenthic fauna of the southwest of Vestkapp (Weddell Sea) transect was dominated by planktonic taxa in terms of individual numbers especially at the deeper stations (938–1983 m). At Halley Bay the total abundance of plankton was lower but its relative abundance (> 80%) was also high, whilst off King George Island peracarid crustaceans were an important fraction.


Zootaxa ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 1394 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEFANIE KAISER ◽  
ANGELIKA BRANDT

During the BENDEX expedition (BENthic Disturbance-EXperiment) with RV Polarstern in Antarctic summer 2003/04, species of the genus Austroniscus Vanhoeffen, 1914 were sampled from the continental shelf of the eastern Weddell Sea. Besides Austroniscus ovalis Vanhoeffen, 1914, which is the first record of this species from western Antarctica, two other species were found, i.e. Austroniscus chelus sp. nov. and Austroniscus obscurus sp. nov. They both bear many resemblances to Austroniscus ovalis, but can be easily distinguished from A. ovalis by the shape of the rostral crest and the first pereonite. The two new species are very similar to each other but differ in the number of articles of the antennula and the shape of pleopods 3 to 5.


Zootaxa ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 1394 (1) ◽  
pp. 47 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEFANIE KAISER ◽  
ANGELIKA BRANDT

During the BENDEX expedition (BENthic Disturbance-EXperiment) with RV Polarstern in Antarctic summer 2003/04, species of the genus Austroniscus Vanhoeffen, 1914 were sampled from the continental shelf of the eastern Weddell Sea. Besides Austroniscus ovalis Vanhoeffen, 1914, which is the first record of this species from western Antarctica, two other species were found, i.e. Austroniscus chelus sp. nov. and Austroniscus obscurus sp. nov. They both bear many resemblances to Austroniscus ovalis, but can be easily distinguished from A. ovalis by the shape of the rostral crest and the first pereonite. The two new species are very similar to each other but differ in the number of articles of the antennula and the shape of pleopods 3 to 5.


Polar Biology ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 34 (8) ◽  
pp. 1125-1133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Enrique Isla ◽  
Dieter Gerdes ◽  
Sergio Rossi ◽  
Ida Fiorillo ◽  
Elisabet Sañé ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document