Particulate metals from a scandium incubation experiment during the PUPCYCLE I R/V Ocean cruise 1905B in the California Current System in 2019

Website: https://www.bco-dmo.org/dataset/940088
Data Type: Cruise Results, experimental
Version: 1
Version Date: 2024-10-10

Project
» CAREER: An integrated molecular and physiological approach to examining the dynamics of upwelled phytoplankton in current and changing oceans (Upwelled Phytoplankton Dynamics)
ContributorsAffiliationRole
Hurst, Matthew P.California Polytechnic State University Humboldt (Cal Poly Humboldt)Principal Investigator
Marchetti, AdrianUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill)Principal Investigator
Till, Claire P.California Polytechnic State University Humboldt (Cal Poly Humboldt)Principal Investigator
York, Amber D.Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)BCO-DMO Data Manager

Abstract
We performed an incubation experiment with added dissolved scandium and/or iron in waters sampled in the California Current System during the PUPCYCLE I cruise in 2019 with Chief Scientist Adrian Marchetti. PUPCYCLE I (Phytoplankton response to the UPwelling CYCLE) took place in summer 2019 onboard the R/V Oceanus (OC 1905b). Water for the incubation was collected from 15 m just off the Big Sur coast 2 June 2019. This was in a region with an extremely narrow shelf. There were five total treatments run in triplicate: control (no addition), +5 nmol/kg dissolved Fe, +5 nmol/kg dissolved Sc, +5 nmol/kg dissolved Fe and +5 nmol/kg dissolved Sc, and filtered seawater with +5 nmol/kg dissolved Fe and +5 nmol/kg dissolved Sc. After 24 hours incubating, the incubation was harvested and analyzed for chlorophyll, nutrients, and dissolved and particulate Fe and Sc concentrations. The effort was to investigate similarities and differences in the oceanic chemical cycling of Fe and Sc.


Coverage

Location: California Current System, just offshore the Big Sur coast, 35°55.4’N, 121°32.4’W
Spatial Extent: Lat:35.92333 Lon:-121.54
Temporal Extent: 2019-06-02

Dataset Description

See the "Related Datasets" section for other datasets from this experiment.


Methods & Sampling

Sampling: 

Seawater for the incubation was collected from ~15m at 35°55.4’N, 121°32.4’W using acid-cleaned HDPE tubing taped directly to the amsteel blue line.  A lead weight coated with fiberglass and epoxy paint was at the bottom of the line.  The pump was a teflon Wilden air-operated double-diaphragm pump. The tubing was run into a trace metal clean positive pressure bubble, where it was homogenized in acid-cleaned 50 gallon plastic barrels. From there, 4L cubitainers for the different treatments were rinsed and filled with the homogenized seawater, and then spiked appropriately based on treatment. These cubitainers had been pre-cleaned using the methods of Crawford et al. 2003.

The incubation setup: 

We had five different treatments, with three replicates each:  
control: no addition
+Fe: 5 nmol/kg added dissolved Fe
+Sc: 5 nmol/kg added dissolved Sc
+Fe and +Sc: 5 nmol/kg each of dissolved Sc and Fe added

filtered +Fe and + Sc: the seawater was filtered with 0.2 micrometer pre-cleaned supor Acropak filter before rinsing and filling the cubitainer, and then spiking with 5 nmol/kg each of dissolved Sc and Fe

The cubitainers were incubated in an on-deck plexiglass incubator that was surface-seawater chilled and covered with a screening to achieve 30% of the incident irradiance. After 24 hours, the incubation was ended and each treatment was harvested.

Sample analysis: 

Samples for labile particulates were sampled and analyzed by the Hurst lab. The cubitainers were sampled into 2 L polycarbonate bottles with three rinses before filling. They were filtered immediately through pre-cleaned 0.2 mm pore-size polycarbonate track-etched (PCTE) membrane filters (47 mm dia., Nuclepore, Whatman) mounted in Teflon filter sandwiches (Millipore). Filters were stored in the freezer before digestion with a Berger et al. (2008) leach (acetic acid and hydroxylamine), used to extract the labile particulates. Extracts were analyzed for Fe and Sc on the Thermo Fisher Element 2 extended range ICP-MS at UC Santa Cruz.


BCO-DMO Processing Description

* Sheet 1 of submitted file "May 2019 Sc incubation particulates for BCO-DMO.xlsx" was imported into the BCO-DMO data system for this dataset.
** In the BCO-DMO data system missing data identifiers are displayed according to the format of data you access. For example, in csv files it will be blank (null) values. In Matlab .mat files it will be NaN values. When viewing data online at BCO-DMO, the missing value will be shown as blank (null) values.

* Column names adjusted to conform to BCO-DMO naming conventions designed to support broad re-use by a variety of research tools and scripting languages. [Only numbers, letters, and underscores.  Can not start with a number]


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Related Publications

Berger, C. J. M., Lippiatt, S. M., Lawrence, M. G., & Bruland, K. W. (2008). Application of a chemical leach technique for estimating labile particulate aluminum, iron, and manganese in the Columbia River plume and coastal waters off Oregon and Washington. Journal of Geophysical Research, 113. doi:10.1029/2007jc004703 https://doi.org/10.1029/2007JC004703
Methods
Crawford, D. W., Lipsen, M. S., Purdie, D. A., Lohan, M. C., Statham, P. J., Whitney, F. A., Putland, J. N., Johnson, W. K., Sutherland, N., Peterson, T. D., Harrison, P. J., & Wong, C. S. (2003). Influence of zinc and iron enrichments on phytoplankton growth in the northeastern subarctic Pacific. Limnology and Oceanography, 48(4), 1583–1600. Portico. https://doi.org/10.4319/lo.2003.48.4.1583
Methods

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Related Datasets

IsRelatedTo
Till, C. P., Freiberger, R. B., Pierce, E., Lin, Y., Marchetti, A. (2024) Dissolved and particulate Fe and Sc concentrations, chlorophyll, nutrients from a scandium incubation experiment during the PUPCYCLE I R/V Ocean cruise 1905B in the California Current System in 2019. Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 1) Version Date 2024-10-10 http://lod.bco-dmo.org/id/dataset/940093 [view at BCO-DMO]
Relationship Description: Dataset "A scandium incubation experiment during the PUPCYCLE I cruise in the California Current System in 2019" (940093) is the leachable particulate data for the same incubation experiment as "Particulate metals from the scandium incubation experiment on PUPCYCLE I in the California Current System in 2019" dataset (940088).

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Parameters

ParameterDescriptionUnits
Label

The name of each sample

unitless
Timepoint

Timepoint (hours). how long the particular sample incubated for (24 hours in most cases; 0 hours for measurements of the initial conditions before the incubation)

hours
Treatment

Description of the treatment for the particular sample

unitless
Replicate

There were three replicates for each treatment. This parameter serves to disambiguate them. 

unitless
leachable_particulate_Fe

Concentration of iron in particles greater than 0.2 micrometers that were leachable with the weak acid leach

nanomoles per kilogram (nmol/kg)
leachable_particulate_Sc

Concentration of scandium in particles greater than 0.2 micrometers that were leachable with the weak acid leach

picomoles per kilogram (pmol/kg)


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Instruments

Dataset-specific Instrument Name
Thermo Element XR
Generic Instrument Name
Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometer
Dataset-specific Description
Trace metal extracts were analyzed with a Thermo Element XR magnetic sector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP-MS)
Generic Instrument Description
An ICP Mass Spec is an instrument that passes nebulized samples into an inductively-coupled gas plasma (8-10000 K) where they are atomized and ionized. Ions of specific mass-to-charge ratios are quantified in a quadrupole mass spectrometer.


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Deployments

OC1905B

Website
Platform
R/V Oceanus
Start Date
2019-05-24
End Date
2019-06-06


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Project Information

CAREER: An integrated molecular and physiological approach to examining the dynamics of upwelled phytoplankton in current and changing oceans (Upwelled Phytoplankton Dynamics)

Coverage: California Upwelling Zone


NSF Award Abstract:
Upwelling zones are hotspots of photosynthesis that are very dynamic in space and time. Microsocopic algae, known as phytoplankton, bloom when deep, nutrient-rich waters are upwelled into sunlit surface layers of the ocean, providing nourishment that supports productive food webs and draws down carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere to the deep ocean. Photosynthetic microbes in these regions must constantly adapt to changes in their chemical and physical environments. For example, subsurface populations respond to changes in light as they approach the surface. When upwelled waters move offshore, cells sink out of the illuminated zone, establishing seed populations that remain inactive until the next upwelling event. This process is called the upwelling conveyor belt cycle (UCBC). How phytoplankton respond to these changes in environmental conditions and how they may influence their nutrient requirements remains unknown. With future ocean changes predicted to alter seawater chemistry, including ocean acidification and decreased iron availability, some phytoplankton groups may be more vulnerable than others. Accompanying educational activities provide learning experiences to enhance understanding and awareness of marine microbes. The development of a research hub at UNC aims to provide infrastructure and support for scientists and students conducting research on environmental genomics. A laboratory component for an upper-level undergraduate course focused on marine phytoplankton is being developed. Educational outreach activities to broader communities include creation of a lesson plan on phytoplankton in upwelling zones and a virtual research cruise experience for middle-school students, as well as a hands-on lab activity for a local museum focused on marine phytoplankton and the important roles they play in shaping our planet.

The project examines how phytoplankton respond at the molecular and physiological level to the different UCBC stages, which seed populations (i.e., surface versus subsurface) contribute most to phytoplankton blooms during upwelling events of varying intensity, how phytoplankton elemental compositions are altered throughout UCBC stages, and how future predicted ocean conditions will affect the phytoplankton responses to UCBC conditions. This project contains both laboratory and fieldwork. In the laboratory, phytoplankton isolates recently obtained from upwelling regions are exposed to simulated UCBC conditions to examine changes in gene expression, growth and photosynthetic characteristics and elemental composition. Cultures are subjected to both current and future ocean conditions, including reduced iron availability and higher CO2. In the field, research cruises within upwelling regions study the dynamics of natural phytoplankton communities (both surface and subsurface) experiencing upwelling and relaxation and within simulated upwelling incubation experiments. Knowledge of how phytoplankton are affected by UCBC conditions at an integrated molecular, physiological and elemental level under both current and future scenarios is imperative for the proper conservation and management of these critically important ecosystems.



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Funding

Funding SourceAward
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE)

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