Monitoring a changing Arctic: Recent advancements in the study of sea ice microbial communities
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24427Dato
2021-11-25Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Campbell, Karley; Matero, Ilkka; Bellas, Christopher; Turpin-Jelfs, Thomas; Anhaus, Philipp; Graeve, Martin; Fripiat, Francois; Tranter, Martyn; Landy, Jack Christopher; Sanchez-Baracaldo, Patricia; Leu, Eva; Katlein, Christian; Mundy, C.J.; Rysgaard, Søren; Tedesco, Letizia; Haas, Christian; Nicolaus, MarcelSammendrag
Sea ice continues to decline across many regions
of the Arctic, with remaining ice becoming increasingly
younger and more dynamic. These changes alter the
habitats of microbial life that live within the sea ice,
which support healthy functioning of the marine ecosystem
and provision of resources for human-consumption, in
addition to influencing biogeochemical cycles (e.g. air–sea
CO2 exchange). With the susceptibility of sea ice
ecosystems to climate change, there is a pressing need to
fill knowledge gaps surrounding sea ice habitats and their
microbial communities. Of fundamental importance to this
goal is the development of new methodologies that permit
effective study of them. Based on outcomes from the
DiatomARCTIC project, this paper integrates existing
knowledge with case studies to provide insight on how to
best document sea ice microbial communities, which
contributes to the sustainable use and protection of Arctic
marine and coastal ecosystems in a time of environmental
change.
Forlag
SpringerSitering
Campbell KL, Matero I, Bellas C, Turpin-Jelfs T, Anhaus P, Graeve M, Fripiat F, Tranter M, Landy JC, Sanchez-Baracaldo P, Leu E, Katlein C, Mundy C, Rysgaard S, Tedesco L, Haas C, Nicolaus M. Monitoring a changing Arctic: Recent advancements in the study of sea ice microbial communities. Ambio. 2022;51:318-332Metadata
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