Contributors | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Dayton, Paul | University of California-San Diego Scripps (UCSD-SIO) | Principal Investigator |
Oliver, John | Moss Landing Marine Laboratories (MLML) | Co-Principal Investigator |
Kim, Stacy | Moss Landing Marine Laboratories (MLML) | Scientist, Contact |
Copley, Nancy | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO) | BCO-DMO Data Manager |
Abundance and distribution of marine infauna in McMurdo Sound, Antarctica, 1988 to 2004.
Sampling and Analytical Methodology:
Benthic fauna were collected by divers in six replicate 0.0075 sq m (0.98 cm diameter) cores. Samples were taken in austral spring (1 November to 10 December). The samples were sieved live on 0.5 mm mesh, fixed in 10% buffered formalin, and preserved in 70% ethanol. Identifications were to species level wherever possible, with the exclusion of large meiofauna (nematodes and harpacticoid copepods). Great care was taken in each step of processing not to lose a single animal; QA/QC procedures included spot check reviews of sample residue, periodic sample recounts, and updating taxonomy as name changes and new species were published in the literature. Locations pre-2001 were determined from shore lineups and are not as accurate as locations post-2001 that were located with GPS.
Related files and references:
Conlan, K.E., S.L. Kim, A.R. Thurber, E. Hendrycks. 2010. Benthic changes at McMurdo Station, Antarctica following local sewage treatment and regional iceberg-mediated productivity decline. Marine Pollution Bulletin 60:419-432.
Conlan, K.E., S.L. Kim, H.S. Lenihan, J.S. Oliver. 2004. Benthic changes over ten years of organic enrichment by McMurdo Station, Antarctica. Marine Pollution Bulletin 49:43-60.
File |
---|
McMurdo_benthos_year.csv (Comma Separated Values (.csv), 2.65 MB) MD5:a4e4e2f3a03c78edc675f7e36a9d80e6 Primary data file for dataset ID 4009 |
Parameter | Description | Units |
lat | latitude; North is positive; negative denotes South | decimal degrees |
lon | longitude; East is positive; negative denotes West | decimal degrees |
depth | depth of sample | meters |
year | year of sampling | unitless |
replicate | replicate number | unitless |
taxon | taxonomic group or entity | unitless |
count | number of individuals found in the sample | each |
sta | station number, assigned by BCO-DMO. | unitless |
phylum | Taxonomic phylum of organism | unitless |
Website | |
Platform | shoreside McMurdo_Dayton |
Start Date | 1988-01-01 |
End Date | 2004-12-31 |
Description | Scuba divers sampled infauna around McMurdo station, Antarctica, from 1988 to 2004. |
From proposal abstract:
The ability to document and understand long-term trends in ocean climate and ecology, including the role of human activities on the biosphere, depends on an adequate knowledge of natural interdecadal fluctuations. The proposed research will document changes in benthic ecosystems in McMurdo Sound over the last four decades, i.e., since the beginning of quantitative studies of population and community organization in this region. The investigators will retrieve, analyze, and archive historical data of benthic assemblages in both hard and soft substrata, and continue work on several time series projects begun in the mid-1960s and early 1970s. The investigators will focus on the succession of marine invertebrate communities that have settled and survived on a variety of artificial substrates placed on the sea floor from the late 1960s to 1989. The substrates harbor several decades of information on patterns of settlement, growth, survival, longevity, overgrowth and other biological interactions and processes. The original researchers will relocate and permanently mark (with GPS) historical sampling sites; recover data from as much of the historical work as possible; provide meta-data to insure that past data are understood and sites can be properly resampled; and make all data available to the general science community in a permanent database housed at SCAR-MarBIN. The proposed work will be closely coordinated with an international macroecology program in the Ross Sea, represented by collaborator Simon Thrush (Latitudinal Gradient Project). In addition to reporting results in peer-reviewed publications and providing research support and opportunities for at least two graduate students, the investigators also will involve undergraduate and high school interns in the project, and participate in teacher education programs. The investigators will continue ongoing collaborations with K-12 outreach and college programs that focus on ocean science, and develop a new, broader public outreach effort with the Birch Aquarium at Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
Funding Source | Award |
---|---|
NSF Antarctic Sciences (NSF ANT) |