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Distribution of algal aggregates undersummer sea ice in the Central Arctic

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Distribution of algal aggregates under summer sea ice in the Central Arctic

Christian Katlein

1

, Marcel Nicolaus

1

, Mar Fernández-Mendez

1,2

, Frank Wenzhöfer

1,2

CHRISTIAN KATLEIN Bussestraße 24 27570 Bremerhaven Telefon 0471 4831-0 www.awi.de

References

Katlein, C. , et al. (2014): Distribution of algal aggregates under summer sea ice in the Central Arctic , Polar Biology

Assmy, P., et al. (2013), Floating Ice-Algal Aggregates below Melting Arctic Sea Ice, PLoS ONE, 8(10), e76599,

Boetius, A., et al. (2013), Export of Algal Biomass from the Melting Arctic Sea Ice, Science, 339(6126), 1430-1432

Nicolaus, M., and C. Katlein (2013), Mapping radiation transfer through sea ice using a remotely operated vehicle (ROV), The Cryosphere, 7(3), 763-777

Acknowledgements

We thank the captain and crew of RV Polarstern and the cruise leader Antje Boetius. Stefan Hen- dricks, Thomas Krumpen, Martin Schiller, Scott Sörensen, Ben Lange and Larysa Istomina helped with the ROV measurements. Clara Stolle helped with the processing of ROV images.

This study was funded by the Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und Meeresfor- schung (AWI). Additional funds supporting this work were provided via Antje Boetius by the European Research Council Advanced Investigator grant 294757.

1Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und Meeresforschung, Bremerhaven, Germany 2Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Bremen, Germany

Introduction

Algal aggregates underneath the sea ice of the central Arctic have been described sporadically, but the frequency and distribution of their occurrence as well as their role in the ecosystem remain poorly quantified due to the lack of large-scale quantitative obser- vations.

During the IceArc expedition of RV Polarstern in late summer 2012, we observed different types of ice algal aggregates under- neath and attached to the underside of the sea ice with a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) underneath various ice types in the cent- ral basins.

Aggregate quantification from upward looking ROV-images

Floe scale maps of the aggregate distribution

Aggregates seem to be accumulated in level ice, that is surrounded by pressure ridges. Those locations offer protection from strong currents as well as higher light levels. No statistically signifigant dependence of aggregate abundance on physical habitat properties

could be identified.

Conclusions

• Aggregate composition and biomass can be inferred from image analysis

• Floe scale distribution is influenced by ice topography

• Aggregate distribution is highly dynamic and does not correlate to any of the measured physical properties.

• Higher aggregate abundance in the Central Arctic with a higher contribution of Melosira Arctica towards the Laptev Sea.

Physical distribution processes

Different physical mechanisms are responsible for the distribution of algal aggregates underneath sea-ice positioning them in the level ice stretches between ridges and dome-like structures.

Images were cropped and aggregates detected with a threshold algorithm. Size and shape properties of all detected aggregates were determined and the image registered to true scales using the measured distance to the ice.

Aggregate detection was checked manually and all incorrect de- tections were discarded. Aggregate abundances were gridded in 3x3m cells to account for repeated sampling of some positions.

Large scale distribution

Upward looking images were obtained from a SD video camera onboard an Ocean Modules V8Sii-ROV. Physical properties of the habitat such as ice draft, light transmittance, salinity, temperature and dissolved oxygen were measured with additional sensors on- board the ROV.

Mean abundance (diameter of circles) and aggregate type deter- mined from ROV images. In the transpolar drift, round aggregates consisting mainly of sea-ice derived pennate diatoms dominated, while strings of Melosira arctica were dominant in the central pack-ice. The cruise track of the expedition and ice station num- bers are shown in blue.

Aggregate types

Round aggregates mainly composed of

pennate diatoms

Filamentous aggregates mainly composed of

Melosira arctica

9

8

7

6

1 2

Contact: Christian.Katlein@awi.de

buoyant aggregates a)

shelter from currents

c) c) repositioning

ice drift

b)

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