Dataset: Organized and quality-controlled CalCOFI data for CTD casts and bottle measurements from CalCOFI stations between La Jolla, California to Point Conception between 1984-2019

Final no updates expectedDOI: 10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.860397.1Version 1 (2021-09-24)Dataset Type:Cruise Results

Principal Investigator: Lisa A. Levin (University of California-San Diego Scripps)

Co-Principal Investigator: Nicholas Oesch (University of California-San Diego)

Contact: Lillian R. McCormick (University of California-San Diego Scripps)

BCO-DMO Data Manager: Taylor Heyl (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)

BCO-DMO Data Manager: Shannon Rauch (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)


Project: Vision-mediated influence of low oxygen on the physiology and ecology of marine larvae (Vision under hypoxia)


Abstract

In this dataset, we analyzed daytime casts (09:00-16:00) of both discrete bottle data and continuous CTD casts from CalCOFI stations restricted to an area from La Jolla, California to Point Conception and 215 km maximum offshore. This dataset has combined bottle and CTD casts to represent the date range 1984-2019. We used the oxygen and irradiance measurements to determine the visual luminoxyscape for each of the larval species. This range was bounded by the oxygen (partial pressure) where the p...

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This dataset is a subset of data collected by the California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigations (CalCOFI) long-term monitoring system. All information regarding the sampling program can be found on https://calcofi.org/about/. Briefly, CalCOFI and the Southern California Coastal Ocean Observing System (SCCOOS) samples a random array within a gridded station map during quarterly cruises and conducts vertical hydrographic casts to ~500-meters (m) depth (or 10 m above bottom where bottom depth < 500 m). More information can be found at: https://calcofi.org/index.php. All data used can be found in their original form at: https://calcofi.org/data/oceanographic-data/ctd-cast-files/.

In this analysis, we used data from CalCOFI stations restricted to an area from La Jolla, California to Point Conception (Line 80.0- Line 93.3; 32.95-34.46 °N at shoreline) and 215 kilometers maximum offshore (Station 60; 119.57-121.150 °W). We analyzed daytime casts (09:00-16:00) of both discrete bottle data and continuous CTD casts. This dataset has combined bottle and CTD casts to represent the date range 1984-2019. We used the oxygen and irradiance measurements to determine the visual luminoxyscape for each of the larval species. This range was bounded by the oxygen (partial pressure) where the pO2 would permit 50% minimum retinal function (V50; 13, 7.2, 10.2, and 6.8 kPa for larvae of Doryteuthis opalescens, Octopus bimaculatus, Metacarcinus gracilis, and Pleuroncodes planipes, respectively), and where there is sufficient irradiance for a visual response (0.0311 µmol photons m-2 s-1) for each species.

The "limits" are calculating depths where those oxygen and irradiance requirements would no longer be met. This would be the "visual luminoxyscape depth" (VLD); these depths are presented in the metadata file, “Metadata.Max.Depth.csv.” The limits used to calculate the VLD are “Do.50”, “Ob.50”, “Mg.50”, etc. Oxygen limits for visual physiology were taken from McCormick et al., 2019 (see below for reference).

Additionally, oxygen limits for metabolism were used to determine the depth of occurrence of the Pcrit (the oxygen below which the animal cannot maintain a constant metabolic rate). This was calculated in McCormick, 2019. The depths of occurrence for metabolic limits were determined for larvae of D. opalescens and O. bimaculatus. The dataset columns associated with this are “Do.met” and “Ob.met”.

Instruments:
Full details of the instrumentation on the CalCOFI CTD can be found here: https://calcofi.org/sampling-info/methods/bottle-sampling-methods/. Wherever possible, we used the cruise-corrected data in the "final" cast files provided by CalCOFI, indicating the files already QC by CalCOFI data managers.

Code:
There are 3 R files associated with this dataset: Luminox_May21_Part1_ann.R, Luminox_May21_Part2_ann.R, and Luminox_May21_Part3_ann.R. These are further described in the attached file "Luminoxyscape_Code_Description_of_Files.txt". In general:
The code (separated into 3 parts for simplicity and organization) is the entire code dataset from the Luminoxyscape project. The code covers everything including the quality-control for data downloaded directly from CalCOFI (https://calcofi.org/data/oceanographic-data/ctd-cast-files/) in Part 1, the analysis of maximum depths in Part 2 (associated with data "Luminoxyscape maximum depth", and the final analysis for the paper (McCormick et al., Limnology and Oceanography Letters, accepted) including code for all statistics in the analysis and graphs used in the figures. The code is clean and works, but is designed to show the process of the analysis for the project, rather than direct reproducibility. Contact information is included for those who wish to ask questions. All code was run using R (v3.6.3) run through RStudio (v. 2021.09.0).


Related Datasets

IsRelatedTo

Dataset: Luminoxyscape maximum depth
McCormick, L. R., Oesch, N., Levin, L. A. (2022) Maximum depths of the visual luminoxyscape for four species of marine invertebrate larvae from CalCOFI stations between La Jolla, California to Point Conception between 1984-2019. Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 1) Version Date 2021-09-24 doi:10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.859867.1

Related Publications

Results

McCormick, L. R., Gangrade, S., Garwood, J. C., Oesch, N. W., & Levin, L. A. (2022). Oxygen and irradiance constraints on visual habitat in a changing ocean: The luminoxyscape. Limnology and Oceanography Letters, 8(2), 220–228. Portico. https://doi.org/10.1002/lol2.10296
Methods

McCormick, L. R. (2019). Oxygen dependence of visual physiology and behavior in marine invertebrate larvae and its ecological implications. UC San Diego. ProQuest ID: McCormick_ucsd_0033D_18804. Merritt ID: ark:/13030/m5r54xrg. Retrieved from https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4670p0fb
Methods

McCormick, L. R., Levin, L. A., & Oesch, N. W. (2019). Vision is highly sensitive to oxygen availability in marine invertebrate larvae. The Journal of Experimental Biology, 222(10), jeb200899. doi:10.1242/jeb.200899
Methods

McCormick, L. R., Levin, L. A., & Oesch, N. W. (2022). Reduced Oxygen Impairs Photobehavior in Marine Invertebrate Larvae. The Biological Bulletin, 000–000. https://doi.org/10.1086/717565