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  • Data  (3)
  • OceanRep
  • Antarctic; ANT-XXVIII/2; BONGO; Bongo net; carbon turnover; CSIA; lipids; Polarstern; PS79; PS79/053-5; South Atlantic Ocean; Zooplankton  (1)
  • algae; Decapoda; fatty acids; lipids; midgut gland; triacylglycerols; trophic relationships; vascular plants  (1)
  • calanoid copepods; South Atlantic Ocean; subtropical area; Zooplankton  (1)
  • 2020-2024  (3)
Document type
  • Data  (3)
  • OceanRep
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Keywords
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  • 2020-2024  (3)
Year
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-04-20
    Description: Males of the four crab species Percnon affine (H. Milne Edwards, 1853), Grapsus albolineatus (Latreille in Milbert, 1812), Orisarma intermedium (Schubart &Ng, 2020), and Geothelphusa albogilva (Shy, Ng & Yu, 1994), were collected in the southern part of Taiwan in May 2007. Individuals were starved for 12 days and midgut glands were dissected before and after the starvation period. Midgut glands were lyophilized and total lipids were extracted with dichloromethane:methanol (2:1 per volume) and an aqueous solution of 0.88% KCl. Extracted lipid mass was determined gravimetrically. Lipid classes were separated and quantified using Thin-Layer Chromatography with an integrated flame ionization detector (MK-5 TLC/FID analyzer, Iatron Laboratories). Lipids were converted to fatty acids methyl esters (FAME) by applying methanol containing 3% concentrated sulfuric acid. FAMEs were quantified by gas chromatography equipped with a DB-FFAP column, a programmable temperature vaporizer injector, and a flame ionization detector. Helium was used as carrier gas. Fatty acids were identified by retention times and by using fish oil standard (Marinol). Data are supplement to: Stumpp et al (2021) Dietary preferences of brachyuran crabs from Taiwan for marine or terrestrial food sources: evidence based on fatty acid trophic markers accepted for publication in Frontiers in Zoology
    Keywords: algae; Decapoda; fatty acids; lipids; midgut gland; triacylglycerols; trophic relationships; vascular plants
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet, 202.7 kBytes
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-06-25
    Description: Copepod samples were taken during the Antarctic expedition PS 79 (ANT XXVIII/2) with RV Polarstern (Cape Town – Cape Town, 3 Dec 2011 – 5 Jan 2012). Copepods were collected at Station 53 (60° 3.22'S, 0° 2.14' E) in the Antarctic Weddell Gyre on 28 December 2011 by vertical bongo net hauls down to 300 m depth. Specimens of C. acutus (210 copepodids CV and 160 females) and of C. propinquus (125 females, no CV stages available) were gently sorted from the catch, maintained alive in filtered seawater at 0°C in a cooling container on board and transported to Germany at 0°C by airplane. Feeding carbon-labelled diatoms to these copepods during 9 days of feeding ,13C elucidated assimilation and turnover rates of copepod total lipids as well as specific fatty acids and alcohols. The 13C incorporation into these compounds was monitored by compound-specific stable isotope analysis (CSIA). The differences in lipid assimilation and turnover clearly show that the copepod species exhibit a high variability and plasticity to adapt their lipid production to their various life phases.
    Keywords: Antarctic; ANT-XXVIII/2; BONGO; Bongo net; carbon turnover; CSIA; lipids; Polarstern; PS79; PS79/053-5; South Atlantic Ocean; Zooplankton
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet, 5.4 MBytes
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-06-10
    Description: Abundance and community structure of calanoid copepods of one day (stn. 16; bottom depth 5,433 m) and one night station (stn. 15; bottom depth 5,462 m) were analyzed (Fig. 1). Stratified vertical hauls were carried out within 24 h with a HydroBios Multinet Maxi (0.5 m2 net opening, 9 nets, 150 µm mesh size) from 800 m depth to the surface (strata: 800-700-600-500-400-300-200-100-50-0 m). The filtered water volume was measured with a flowmeter attached to the net opening. After retrieval, samples were preserved in a 4% borax-buffered formaldehyde in seawater solution. Calanoid copepods were sorted according to their developmental stages (copepodids C1-3 and C4/5, adult females and males), counted and identified to genus or, if possible, to species level under a dissecting microscope (Leica MZ12). Rare species (〈100 individuals per sample) were counted from the entire sample. Total length (TL) of up to 100 calanoid individuals per taxonomic category (i.e. family/genus/species) and stage was measured (~6,600 specimens in total). Dry mass (DM) of calanoids was calculated based on the median TL of each taxonomic category. Individual respiration rates were calculated from individual DM and in situ temperatures, which were then converted to carbon units and used to calculate ingestion and egestion rates.
    Keywords: calanoid copepods; South Atlantic Ocean; subtropical area; Zooplankton
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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