The biota of the world's seafloor is fueled by bursts of seasonal primary production. For food-limited sediment communities to persist, a balance must exist between metazoan consumption of and competition with bacteria, a balance which likely changes through the seasons. Polar marine ecosystems are ideal places to study such complex interactions due to stark seasonal shifts between heterotrophic and autotrophic communities, and temperatures that may limit microbial processing of organic matter. The research will test the following hypotheses: 1) heterotrophic bacteria compete with macrofauna for food; 2) as phytoplankton populations decline macrofauna increasingly consume microbial biomass to sustain their populations; and 3) in the absence of seasonal photosynthetic inputs, macrofaunal biodiversity will decrease unless supplied with microbially derived nutrition. Observational and empirical studies will test these hypotheses at McMurdo Station, Antarctica, where a high-abundance macro-infaunal community is adapted to this boom-and-bust cycle of productivity. The investigator will mentor undergraduates from a predominantly minority-serving institution, in the fields of invertebrate taxonomy and biogeochemistry. The general public and young scientists will be engaged through lectures at local K-12 venues and launch of an interactive website. The results will better inform scientists and managers about the effects of climate change on polar ecosystems and the mechanisms of changing productivity patterns on global biodiversity.
Dataset | Latest Version Date | Current State |
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Observational and experimental stable isotope data including stable isotopes from infauna collected in sediment cores at McMurdo Station, Antarctica in September, November and February of 2012 and 2013 (McMurdo Benthos project) | 2017-10-11 | Preliminary and in progress |
Fatty acid data from infauna in sediment cores at McMurdo Station, Antarctica in September, November and February of 2012 and 2013 (McMurdo Benthos project) | 2017-10-11 | Preliminary and in progress |
McMurdo Spiophanes beds 16s V4 region community composition from sediment cores at McMurdo Station, Antarctia on Sept 9th, 2012 (McMurdo Benthos project) | 2017-10-10 | Final no updates expected |
Principal Investigator: Andrew Thurber
Oregon State University (OSU-CEOAS)
Contact: Andrew Thurber
Oregon State University (OSU-CEOAS)