Award Abstract # 0526502
Collaborative Research: Zooplankton in the Redoxcline of the Cariaco Basin: Impact on Biogeochemical Cycling

NSF Org: OCE
Division Of Ocean Sciences
Recipient: UNIVERSITY OF RHODE ISLAND
Initial Amendment Date: September 14, 2005
Latest Amendment Date: March 8, 2011
Award Number: 0526502
Award Instrument: Standard Grant
Program Manager: David Garrison
OCE
 Division Of Ocean Sciences
GEO
 Directorate for Geosciences
Start Date: August 1, 2006
End Date: January 31, 2012 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $560,794.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $616,141.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2005 = $560,794.00
FY 2009 = $55,347.00
History of Investigator:
  • Karen Wishner (Principal Investigator)
    kwishner@uri.edu
  • Brad Seibel (Co-Principal Investigator)
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: University of Rhode Island
75 LOWER COLLEGE RD RM 103
KINGSTON
RI  US  02881-1974
(401)874-2635
Sponsor Congressional District: 02
Primary Place of Performance: University of Rhode Island
75 LOWER COLLEGE RD RM 103
KINGSTON
RI  US  02881-1974
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
02
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): CJDNG9D14MW7
Parent UEI: NSA8T7PLC9K3
NSF Program(s): BIOLOGICAL OCEANOGRAPHY,
OCE-Ocean Sciences Research
Primary Program Source: app-0105 
01000910DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
Program Reference Code(s): 1389, 9150, EGCH
Program Element Code(s): 165000, 689900
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.050

ABSTRACT


The CARIACO (CArbon Retention In A Colored Ocean) Program is a time-series programs, with the central goal to better understand seasonal to decadal time-scales of processes governing ocean biogeochemistry. The CARIACO site is situated in the tropics on a productive continental margin off Venezuela, the basin is anoxic, and the site is strongly connected to paleoclimate investigations. Thus, CARIACO has the additional goal of relating modern oceanographic processes with the production, transformation, and preservation of particulate matter in the sediment record.

Zooplankton composition, behavior, and physiological rates are important components of the biological pump. Recent findings from the Cariaco Basin and other regions with pelagic redoxclines (suboxic and anoxic interfaces) suggest that they are active regions of biogeochemical cycling, in which C may be directly transferred from bacterial production to zooplankton grazers.

The goals of this project are to determine the vertical and horizontal distributions of zooplankton in relation to the redoxcline during two seasons using discrete-depth net samples and a vertical-profiling laser-line scan camera system. Anaerobic and aerobic respiration and metabolites, excretion, and egestion rates will be experimentally determined for vertical migrators and resident species nearsurface and at suboxic and anoxic depths to determine whether zooplankton differ in their release of metabolic and egested products, due to differences in their metabolism and/or composition of food resources. Grazing experiments, in combination with lipid biomarkers and stable isotopic compositions, will be used to assess in situ diet and long-term feeding history of zooplankton. Fecal pellet composition will be compared with pellets in sediment traps. Time-series zooplankton samples also will be analyzed to obtain temporal information on zooplankton community dynamics and allow a seasonal estimate of the zooplankton contribution to elemental fluxes.

Intellectual Merit. One of the grand challenges of oceanography is to understand the processes that control the transformation and fate of organic carbon in marine systems. Meeting this challenge is hindered by a lack of basic information about factors that govern the response of biological activity to environmental forcing and climate change. In particular, the role of the marine biosphere in the global carbon cycle remains poorly constrained, in part due to uncertainties about biological controls on the quality and quantity of carbon export. This project will contribute to our knowledge of the role of mesozooplankton in biogeochemical cycles, especially in relation to how processes may be modified in regions with anoxic or suboxic layers and strong redox gradients, and will help to correctly understand the links between water column processes and climate history as recorded in the varved sediments of the Cariaco Basin.

Broader Impacts. The zooplankton time-series will provide information on patterns of marine biodiversity and ecological interactions from a poorly known region. The CARIACO Program has an ongoing impact in technology transfer and human resource development in Venezuela. This project will help train personnel in Venezuela and will support several graduate students. The lead investigators and students will develop materials on the project for dissemination through the NSF-Center for Ocean Science Education Excellence (COSEE) located at USF.

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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(Showing: 1 - 10 of 18)
Childress, JJ; Seibel, BA; Thuesen, EV "N-specific metabolic data are not relevant to the 'visual interactions' hypothesis concerning the depth-related declines in metabolic rates: Comment on Ikeda et al. (2006)" MARINE ECOLOGY-PROGRESS SERIES , v.373 , 2008 , p.187 View record at Web of Science 10.3354/meps0785
Fabry, V. J.; Seibel, B. A.; Feely, R. A.; Orr, J. C "Impacts of ocean acidification on marine fauna and ecosystem processes" ICES Journal of Marine Science , v.65 , 2008 , p.414
Maas, AE; Wishner, KF; Seibel, BA "The metabolic response of pteropods to acidification reflects natural CO2-exposure in oxygen minimum zones" Biogeosciences , v.9 , 2012 , p.747 doi:10.5194/bg-9-747-2012
Robinson, C, Steinberg, D, Anderson, T, Aristegui, J, Carlson, C, Frost, J, Ghiglione, J-F, Hernandez-Leon, S, Jackson, G, Koppelmann, R, Queguiner, B, Ragueneau, O, Rassoulzadegan, F, Robison, B, Tamburini, C, Tanaka, T, Wishner, K, Zhang, J "Mesopelagic zone ecology and biogeochemistry--a synthesis" Deep-Sea Research II , v.57 , 2010 , p.1504 doi:10.1016/j.dsr2.2010.02.018
Rosa, R. and Seibel, B. A. "Living on the surface: the physiological demands and ecological tradeoffs of an epipelagic existence in paper nautiluses, Argonauta nouryi." ICES J. Mar. Science. , v.67 , 2010 , p.1
Rosa, R; Seibel, BA "Synergistic effects of climate-related variables suggest future physiological impairment in a top oceanic predator" PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA , v.105 , 2008 , p.20776 View record at Web of Science 10.1073/pnas.080688610
Rosa, R; Seibel, BA "Voyage of the argonauts in the pelagic realm: physiological and behavioural ecology of the rare paper nautilus, Argonauta nouryi" ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE , v.67 , 2010 , p.1494 View record at Web of Science 10.1093/icesjms/fsq02
Rosa, R.; Seibel, B. A "Synergistic effect of climate related variables suggests future physiological impairment in a top oceanic predator" Proceedings National Academy Sciences , v.52 , 2008 , p.20776
Rosa, R.; Seibel, B. A. "Metabolic physiology of the Humboldt Squid, Dosidicus gigas: implications for vertical migration in a pronounced oxygen minimum zone" Progress in Oceanography , v.86 , 2010 , p.72
Rosa, R. Trueblood, L.A., and Seibel, B.A. "Ecophysiological demands on scaling of aerobic and anaerobic metabolism of deep-sea squids" Physiological and Biochemical Zoology , v.82 , 2009 DOI 10.1086/591950
Rosa, R; Trueblood, L; Seibel, BA "Ecophysiological Influence on Scaling of Aerobic and Anaerobic Metabolism of Pelagic Gonatid Squids" PHYSIOLOGICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL ZOOLOGY , v.82 , 2009 , p.419 View record at Web of Science 10.1086/59195
(Showing: 1 - 10 of 18)

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