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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-07-28
    Description: The present dataset is part of an interdisciplinary project carried out on board the RV Southern Surveyor off New South Wales (Australia) from the 15th to the 31st October 2010. The main objective of the research voyage was to evaluate how the East Australian Current (EAC) affects the optical, chemical, physical, and biological water properties of the continental shelf and slope off the NSW coast.
    Keywords: 14C in-situ incubation; Ammonia; Calculated; Carbon, organic, particulate; Carbon/Nitrogen ratio; Chlorophyll a; Comment; CTD/Rosette; CTD-RO; Date; Date/Time of event; Day of the year; Density, sigma-theta (0); Depth, bottom/max; DEPTH, water; Elevation of event; Event label; Fluorescence; Fluorescence, maximum; High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC); Latitude of event; Latitude of event 2; Light saturation; Longitude of event; Longitude of event 2; Maximum light utilization coefficient in carbon per chlorophyll a; Mixed layer depth; Nitrate; Nitrogen, organic, particulate; Oxygen; Phosphate; Photoinhibition in carbon per chlorophyll a; Pressure, water; Primary production of carbon per hour; Production rate, maximal, light saturated, as carbon per chlorophyll a; Radiation, photosynthetically active; Ratio; Salinity; Sample ID; Silicate; Southern Surveyor; SS201009; SS2010v0905; SS2010v0913; SS2010v0914; SS2010v0916; SS2010v0920; SS2010v0923; SS2010v0930; SS2010v0934; SS2010v0940; SS2010v0941; SS2010v0947; SS2010v0949; SS2010v0952; SS2010v0954; SS2010v0955; SS2010v0957; SS2010v0959; SS2010v0960; SS2010v0961; SS2010v0967; SS2010v0968; SS2010v0970; SS2010v0971; SS2010v0975; SS2010v0983; SS2010v0984; Tasman Sea; Temperature, water; Transmission of light; Water bodies
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 2746 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-01-08
    Description: Despite their critical role as the main energy pathway between phytoplankton and fish, the functional complexity of zooplankton is typically poorly resolved in marine ecosystem models. Trait-based approaches—where zooplankton are represented with functional traits such as body size—could help improve the resolution of zooplankton in marine ecosystem models and their role in trophic transfer and carbon sequestration. Here, we present the Zooplankton Model of Size Spectra version 2 (ZooMSSv2), a functional size-spectrum model that resolves nine major zooplankton functional groups (heterotrophic flagellates, heterotrophic ciliates, larvaceans, omnivorous copepods, carnivorous copepods, chaetognaths, euphausiids, salps and jellyfish). Each group is represented by the functional traits of body size, size-based feeding characteristics and carbon content. The model is run globally at 5° resolution to steady-state using long-term average temperature and chlorophyll a for each grid-cell. Zooplankton community composition emerges based on the relative fitness of the different groups. Emergent steady-state patterns of global zooplankton abundance, biomass and growth rates agree well with empirical data, and the model is robust to changes in the boundary conditions of the zooplankton. We use the model to consider the role of the zooplankton groups in supporting higher trophic levels, by exploring the sensitivity of steady-state fish biomass to the removal of individual zooplankton groups across the global ocean. Our model shows zooplankton play a key role in supporting fish biomass in the global ocean. For example, the removal of euphausiids or omnivorous copepods caused fish biomass to decrease by up to 80%. By contrast, the removal of carnivorous copepods caused fish biomass to increase by up to 75%. Our results suggest that including zooplankton complexity in ecosystem models could be key to better understanding the distribution of fish biomass and trophic efficiency across the global ocean.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-01-04
    Description: Plankton is a massive and phylogenetically diverse group of thousands of prokaryotes, protists (unicellular eukaryotic organisms), and metazoans (multicellular eukaryotic organisms; Fig. 1). Plankton functional diversity is at the core of various ecological processes, including productivity, carbon cycling and sequestration, nutrient cycling (Falkowski 2012), interspecies interactions, and food web dynamics and structure (D'Alelio et al. 2016). Through these functions, plankton play a critical role in the health of the coastal and open ocean and provide essential ecosystem services. Yet, at present, our understanding of plankton dynamics is insufficient to project how climate change and other human-driven impacts affect the functional diversity of plankton. That limits our ability to predict how critical ecosystem services will change in the future and develop strategies to adapt to these changes.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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