Zooplankton net haul metadata and specimen removal records collected from the R/V Gunnerus in the Tronheimsfjord, Norway during 2012 (Calanus Diapause project)

Website: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/551905
Version: 2015-02-18

Project
» Identification of Diagnostic Markers of Diapause Preparation in the Copepod Calanus finmarchicus (Calanus_Diapause)
ContributorsAffiliationRole
Baumgartner, MarkWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)Principal Investigator
Tarrant, Ann M.Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)Co-Principal Investigator
Copley, NancyWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)BCO-DMO Data Manager


Dataset Description

This dataset consists of metadata associated with zooplankton net tows taken in Trondheimsfjord, Norway in spring 2012. A list of the specimens removed from the sample are also provided here.


Methods & Sampling

Zooplankton samples were collected in Trondheimsfjord near Trondheim, Norway from 3 May to 11 June 2012 using a Sea-Gear 75-cm diameter ring net equipped with 150 micron mesh net and a cod end.  Oblique tows were conducted over the upper ~50 m for nearly all tows.  A close-open-close mechanism was used to collect zooplankton samples with the same net between roughly 250 and 350 m on three occasions.  The volume filtered by the net was estimated using a General Oceanics flowmeter suspended in the center of the net mouth, and sample depths were measured using a SeaBird SBE39 depth-temperature recorder.  Zooplankton samples were held on ice during transport back to the NTNU/SINTEF laboratory in Trondheim.  Samples were live sorted to remove some late-stage Calanus finmarchicus, and then preserved in 5% buffered formalin.  A small aliquot (subsample) of the bulk sample was removed and all taxa contained therein were enumerated.  Species- or taxon-specific abundance of zooplankton was estimated from the raw counts, the subsample volume, sample volume, and the volume filtered by the net.


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Data Files

File
haul_meta.csv
(Comma Separated Values (.csv), 6.45 KB)
MD5:1b4cf70739f12028f6c85bf59b649925
Primary data file for dataset ID 551905

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Parameters

ParameterDescriptionUnits
station

sampling location

unitless
cruise_name

cruise name assigned by PI

unitless
year

sampling year

yyyy
haul

plankton tow number

unitless
date

sampling date

yyyy-mm-dd
lat_start

latitude at start of haul; north is positive

decimal degrees
lon_start

longitude at start of haul; east is positive

decimal degrees
lat_end

latitude at end of haul; north is positive

decimal degrees
lon_end

longitude at end of haul; east is positive

decimal degrees
time_start

local time at start of haul

HH:MM:SS
time_end

local time at end of haul

HH:MM:SS
wire_out

meters of wire out

meters
depth_w

depth of water

meters
gear_type

type of sampling gear: ring = ring net

unitless
mesh

plankton net mesh size

microns
net_diam

net diameter

meters
haul_type

type of haul: vertical or oblique

unitless
depth_start

depth at start of sample collection

meters
depth_end

depth at end of sample collection

meters
flow_serial_num

flow meter serial number

unitless
flow_count_start

initial flow count reading

unitless
flow_count_end

final flow count reading

unitless
flow_revolutions

number of flow count revolutions

revolutions
flow_cal_constant

flow meter calibration constant

meters/revolution
volume_haul

volume of water filtered during haul

cubic meters
taxa_removed_1

taxa removed from sample (1)

unitless
num_removed_1

Number removed from sample (1)

specimens
taxa_removed_2

taxa removed from sample (2)

unitless
num_removed_2

Number removed from sample (2)

specimens
taxa_removed_3

taxa removed from sample (3)

unitless
num_removed_3

Number removed from sample (3)

specimens
vol_subsample

volume of subsample

milliliters
vol_sample

sample volume

milliliters
processed_flag

flag designating sample processed: 1 = yes

unitless
ISO_DateTime_Local_start

Local date and time in ISO format

YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS.xx


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Instruments

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Flow Meter
Generic Instrument Name
Flow Meter
Dataset-specific Description
General Oceanics flowmeter
Generic Instrument Description
General term for a sensor that quantifies the rate at which fluids (e.g. water or air) pass through sensor packages, instruments, or sampling devices. A flow meter may be mechanical, optical, electromagnetic, etc.

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Ring Net
Generic Instrument Name
Ring Net
Dataset-specific Description
Sea-Gear 75-cm diameter ring net equipped with 150 micron mesh net and a cod end
Generic Instrument Description
A Ring Net is a generic plankton net, made by attaching a net of any mesh size to a metal ring of any diameter. There are 1 meter, .75 meter, .25 meter and .5 meter nets that are used regularly. The most common zooplankton ring net is 1 meter in diameter and of mesh size .333mm, also known as a 'meter net' (see Meter Net).

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Temperature and depth recorder
Generic Instrument Name
Water Temperature Sensor
Dataset-specific Description
SeaBird SBE39 depth-temperature recorder
Generic Instrument Description
General term for an instrument that measures the temperature of the water with which it is in contact (thermometer).


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Deployments

Baumgartner_fjord_2012

Website
Platform
R/V Gunnerus
Start Date
2012-05-03
End Date
2012-06-11
Description
Zooplankton sampling on the RV Gunnerus (102') and RV Calanus (~22') out of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). Sampling by day trips in Trondheimsfjord.


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Project Information

Identification of Diagnostic Markers of Diapause Preparation in the Copepod Calanus finmarchicus (Calanus_Diapause)

Coverage: Trondheimfjord (near Trondheim, Norway)


Extracted from the NSF award abstract:

Oceanic copepods in the family Calanidae, such as Calanus finmarchicus, are among the most abundant animals on the planet, and they serve a key role in marine food webs by transferring energy from phytoplankton to higher trophic levels. The life history of these copepods has been well-studied, but fundamental questions remain about the regulation of an important period of dormancy called diapause. In the last juvenile stage of development, C. finmarchicus either proceed to the terminal molt (i.e., molt into adults) or vertically migrate to depth and initiate diapause. This divergence in developmental pathways has critical implications for C. finmarchicus population dynamics, but is difficult to study experimentally because C. finmarchicus, like all other copepods in the family Calanidae, do not reliably enter diapause in the laboratory. In addition, most temperate populations of calanoid copepods have multiple generations in a single year with variability in the timing of reproduction and development that causes significant heterogeneity in age structure. Thus, field sampling of these heterogeneous populations yields a mixture of copepods that are preparing for diapause, are preparing for the terminal molt, or are not yet preparing for either fate. Studies of diapause preparation in such populations are extremely difficult.

To enable direct investigation of the factors that influence diapause initiation, we require markers that reliably predict the fate of individual copepods (entry into diapause or continued maturation to adulthood) within heterogeneous populations. Fortunately, the fjord population of C. finmarchicus off the coast of Norway during the late spring is remarkably synchronous and is comprised of juvenile copepods that are all destined to undergo diapause. This project will use high-throughput 454 pyrosequencing to identify genes that change in expression as these copepods progress toward diapause. In collaboration with Norwegian researchers, the investigators will also rear copepods in a unique continuous culture and conduct additional transcriptional profiling to identify genes that change in expression as copepods prepare for the terminal molt. Comparison of gene expression patterns in the wild and cultured populations will enable the principal investigators to develop robust markers of diapauses preparation that can be used to study diapause initiation in more heterogeneous temperate populations.



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Funding

Funding SourceAward
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)

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