scholarly journals Prokaryotic Diversity and Composition of Sediments From Prydz Bay, the Antarctic Peninsula Region, and the Ross Sea, Southern Ocean

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiang Li ◽  
Xiaoqian Gu ◽  
Yuanyuan Gui
1996 ◽  
Vol 74 (8) ◽  
pp. 1485-1496 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. McConnell ◽  
M. A. Fedak

Twelve southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) were tracked for an average of 119 days as they left their breeding or moulting beaches on the island of South Georgia between 1990 and 1994. Females travelled either eastward up to 3000 km away to the open Southern Ocean or to the continental shelf on or near the Antarctic Peninsula. Males either stayed close to South Georgia or used South Georgia as a base for shorter trips. The females all left South Georgia in a directed manner at an average rate of 79.4 km/day over at least the first 15 days. Thereafter travel was interrupted by bouts of slower travel or stationary phases. The latter were localized at sites on the continental shelf or along its edge. Three seals that were tracked over more than one season repeated their outward direction of travel and used some of the same sites in subsequent years. The magnitude of the movements makes most of the Southern Ocean potentially available to elephant seals.


2020 ◽  
pp. 95-99
Author(s):  
Judith Allen ◽  
Carole Carlson ◽  
Peter T. Stevick

The Antarctic Humpback Whale Catalogue (AHWC) is an international collaborative project investigating movement patterns of humpback whales in the Southern Ocean and corresponding lower latitude waters. The collection contains records contributed by 261 researchers and opportunistic sources. Photographs come from all of the Antarctic management areas, the feeding grounds in southern Chile and also most of the known or suspected low-latitude breeding areas and span more than two decades. This allows comparisons to be made over all of the major regions used by  Southern Hemisphere humpback whales. The fluke, left dorsal fin/flank and right dorsal fin/flank collections represent 3,655, 413 and 407 individual whales respectively. There were 194 individuals resighted in more than one year, and 82 individuals resighted in more than one region. Resightings document movement along the western coast of South America and movement between the Antarctic Peninsula and western coast of South America and Central America. A single individual from Brazil was resighted off South Georgia, representing the first documented link between the Brazilian breeding ground and any feeding area. A second individual from Brazil was resighted off Madagascar, documenting long distance movement of a female between non-adjacent breeding areas. Resightings also include two matches between American Samoa and the Antarctic Peninsula, documenting the first known feeding site for American Somoa and setting a new long distance seasonal migration record. Three matches between Sector V and eastern Australia support earlier evidence provided by Discovery tags. Multiple resightings of individuals in the Antarctic Peninsula during more than one season indicate that humpback whales in this area show some degree of regional feeding area fidelity. The AHWC provides a powerful non-lethal and non-invasive tool for investigating the movements and population structure of the whales utilising the Southern Ocean Sanctuary. Through this methodical, coordinated comparison and maintenance of collections from across the hemisphere, large-scale movement patterns may be examined, both within the Antarctic, and from the Antarctic to breeding grounds at low latitudes.


Author(s):  
Emily J. Judd ◽  
Linda C. Ivany ◽  
Robert M. DeConto ◽  
Anna Ruth W. Halberstadt ◽  
Nicole M. Miklus ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-170 ◽  
Author(s):  
H.A. Jonkers

Antarctic late Cenozoic pectinid-bearing sedimentary strata are chiefly confined to localities in the northern part of the Antarctic Peninsula, in the McMurdo Sound area, and Marine Plain, East Antarctica. Ages of these deposits range from Oligocene to Holocene. Chlamys-like scallops, which are absent from today's Southern Ocean, thrived in Antarctic waters during both glacial and interglacial episodes, but disappeared during the Late Pliocene. Their extinction is believed to result from the combined effects of increased carbonate solubility, habitat loss and limitations in food availability, associated with major cooling.


Polar Record ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 26 (159) ◽  
pp. 277-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. D. Shaughnessy

AbstractAfter landing the Ross Sea shore party of Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition at Cape Evans, McMurdo Sound, SY Aurora drifted for 313 days between May 1915 and March 1916 in the pack iceof the Ross Sea and Southern Ocean. During the drift A. H. Ninnis maintained observations of the fauna. He was out hunting on the pack ice on at least 86 days to augment the ship's slender provisions, taking 289 penguins, 10 other sea birds and 20 seals. He sighted whales on at least 15 days, including killer whales in July and August and four large whales, possibly blue whales, in November. He also noted birds returning south for the breeding season in spring, progress of moult in emperor penguins, pupping of crabeater and leopard seals, and food items of several seals and seabirds. Most of his report is presented here, edited to improve its readability and remove abbreviations; the text is preceded by a brief summary of the fauna seen and followed by footnotes on some of his observations.


Nature ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 472 (7342) ◽  
pp. 247-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. E. Shevenell ◽  
A. E. Ingalls ◽  
E. W. Domack ◽  
C. Kelly

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Meghana Amarnath Rajanahally

<p>Sea ice algal communities play a very significant role in primary production in the Southern Ocean, being the only source of fixed carbon for all other life in this habitat and contributing up to 22% of Antarctic primary production in ice-covered regions. Therefore it is important to understand how these organisms adapt to this highly variable and harsh environment Previous studies have described their acclimation to changes in environmental conditions but we still do not understand the physiological basis of these responses. This study examines the effects of varying levels of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), ultraviolet-B (UV-B) radiation and temperature on bottom ice algal communities and individual algal species using pulse-amplitude modulation (PAM) fluorometry, the production of mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity.  The experiments conducted in this thesis show that bottom ice algae are capable of acclimating to the higher levels of PAR and temperature that would likely be experienced during sea ice melt As temperature was increased past a threshold temperature of thylakoid integrity, it became the major stressor, causing decreases in photosynthetic yield at around 14°C, even at ambient PAR exposure. Similarly, a thylakoid integrity experiment independently suggested that the critical temperature for the onset of thylakoid damage was 14°C, which correlated well to the 14°C incubation observations, although this is a temperature that sea ice algae are unlikely to encounter in the polar regions.  It is likely that sea ice algae produce additional MAAs, known to be cellular sunscreens, in response to increasing levels of UV-B, allowing tolerance of this stressor. This is the first study in the marine environment to demonstrate that algae can produce MAAs in response to increasing PAR and temperature, even in the absence of UV-B, indicating that MAAs may be more than just sunscreen compounds. The levels of UV-B used in this study were representative of those likely to be faced by the algae during sea ice melt. With increasing temperature, the algae maintained photosynthetic yield and decreased MAA production, implying that the rise in temperature aids the algae with another element of photoprotection such as enzymatic repair. As these results contrasted with previous studies of bottom ice algae that showed no additional MAA production in response to higher levels of PAR and UV-B, it was hypothesized that this difference was attributed to variations in species composition that could modify the productivity of the community.  The short-term effects of increasing PAR and UV -B on three unialgal cultures of Thalassiosira sp., Fragilariopsis sp. (from the Ross Sea), and Chaetoceros sp. (from the Antarctic Peninsula) were therefore examined. In unialgal culture studies, these three algal species showed higher tolerance to PAR and UV-B compared to that of the mixed culture of bottom ice algae, although there remained species-specific variation. Both Ross Sea species showed increasing photosynthetic yield with increasing PAR and UV-B exposure, but there was a difference in the tolerance shown by the two species. Thalassiosira sp. tolerated higher PAR and lower UV-B and Fragilariopsis tolerated lower PAR and higher UV-B. Both species produced MAAs in response to these stressors, indicating that these compounds allowed the algae to decrease levels of photoinhibition.  In comparison to the Ross Sea, the Antarctic Peninsula is an area of higher environmental variability and change, meaning that the species in both regions could have varying acclimatory capabilities. Although data from three species alone cannot conclusively demonstrate that algae from different regions have different acclimatory capabilities, they do illustrate considerable variation between species. Chaetoceros sp. from the Antarctic Peninsula region showed a higher tolerance to PAR and UV-B compared to the Ross Sea species. The former species showed an increase in photosynthetic yield in response to increasing PAR and this was accompanied by a lack of MAA production in response to the experimental levels of PAR, which indicates that the two Ross Sea species have a higher tolerance to PAR compared to the Antarctic Peninsula species. Chaetoceros sp. from the Antarctic Peninsula showed an increase in photosynthetic yield in response to high UV-B exposures, accompanied by MAA production and had no signs of photoinhibition.  A further experiment was conducted to address the weaknesses in the initial methodologies, particularly related to control conditions in the short-term experiments. Common species from the Ross Sea, Antarctic Peninsula and the Arctic were exposed to a combination of increased PAR and UV-B over a period of seven days to compare acclimatory abilities using PAM and SOD activity. Thalassiosira antarctica from the Ross Sea, Chaetoceros socialis from the Antarctic Peninsula and C. socialis from the Arctic showed no significant change in quantum yield over the incubation period. This further highlights the importance of running experiments with compounding factors, as an increase in one factor could alleviate the negative effect of the other. There was an unexpected lack of change in SOD activity for all species under all treatments applied, which could indicate that the levels of PAR and UV-B used were not high enough to cause stress in these species. This work also points to the need to assay for various antioxidants, as algae are known to rely on a network of antioxidants in their defence against environmental stresses.  The data from this thesis clarify the influence of PAR, UV-B and temperature on sea ice algae, and could help better evaluate the fate of these communities under various climate change scenarios. This study has made important steps towards understanding the acclimatory abilities of sea ice algae. Increasing knowledge of sea ice algal physiology, particularly of photosynthetic health in response to environmental change, will help improve predictions of productivity in the most productive ocean on this planet. Algal tolerance to increasing PAR, UV-B and temperature is remarkable, and this ability could be crucial in the context of future climate change. The productivity of these autotrophic microorganisms strongly influences secondary production that ties their fate to that of all other life in the Southern Ocean.</p>


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