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Nutrient availability influences maximum production, speciation, cellular composition, and overall phenology of the Arctic spring ice algal bloom. However, how ice algae obtain nutrients from their environment is not well-understood. Previously documented positive relationships between sea ice nutrient concentrations and algal biomass evidenced that ice algae maintain an intracellular nutrient pool. Here we provide direct evidence that sea ice diatoms store intracellular nitrate+nitrite and silicic acid well above that available in their ambient environment. Differential retention of intracellular pools released during standard melt processing techniques led to an increase in the apparent dissolved ratio of N:Si measured in bulk ice melt samples that likely influenced interpretations of Si-limitation in some previous studies. The ability of ice algae to store nutrient reserves also highlights a critical biological process that stands to shift our understanding of nutrient dynamics in sea ice.

Data and Resources

Data

Metadata

Field Value
Dataset Name Arctic-ICE 2012 Intracellular Nutrients
Dataset General Type sea ice core dissolved and particulate data
Dataset Type Dataset
Dataset Level 1.5-Advanced Quality controlled Data
Program Website
Keyword Vocabulary Polar Data Catalogue
Keyword Vocabulary URL https://www.polardata.ca/pdcinput/public/keywordlibrary
Theme Marine
Dataset Status Complete
Maintenance and Update Frequency As needed
Dataset Last Revision Date 2024-03-06
Dataset DOI 10.34992/q15a-1e88
Metadata Creation Date 2024
Publisher CanWIN
Field Value
Dataset Collection Start Date 2012-05-19
Dataset Collection End Date 2012-06-08
Spatial regions Resolute
Spatial extent West Bound Longitude 95.25
Spatial extent East Bound Longitude 95.25
Spatial extent South Bound Latitude 74.708
Spatial extent North Bound Latitude 74.708
Field Value
Sample Collection
Sample Collection 1
Sampling Instrument Name
Metre stick
Standardized Sampling Instrument Name
metre stick
Sample Collection Method Name
Snow depth measurements
Comment
Method Link
Method Summary
Sample Collection 2
Sampling Instrument Name
Sea-Bird SBE 19plus V2 conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) probe
Standardized Sampling Instrument Name
Seabird CTD
Sample Collection Method Name
Water column salinity
Comment
Method Link
Method Summary

2-m water depth salinities were extracted from CTD casts.

Sample Collection 3
Sampling Instrument Name
Bran-Luebbe 3 autoanalyzer
Standardized Sampling Instrument Name
Sample Collection Method Name
Nutrient concentration
Comment
Method Link
Method Summary

Sample was filtered through pre-combusted (450degC for 5 hr) Whatman GF/F filters using a sterilized syringe. Filtrate was collected in acid-cleaned polyethylene tubes after three rinses with the filtrate, and stored at -20degC until analysis within 6 months using a Bran-Luebbe 3 autoanalyzer (adapted from (Grasshoff et al. 1999)). Samples were analyzed for nitrate+nitrite, phosphate and silicic acid. Samples for Si(OH)4 determination were thawed for at least 24 hr to minimize the issue of silicate polymerization when samples have been stored by freezing (Macdonald et al. 1986).

Bulk ice nutrients - samples were from ice cores melted without filtered seawater addition.

Water Column - 2 m water depth

Intracellular Nutrients - The method used to extract the intracellular nutrient pool was adapted from (Dortch 1982). Within 3 hr of collection, a subsample from the scrape sample was filtered onto a pre-combusted (450°C for 5 h) Whatman GF/F filter within an acid-cleaned filter head mounted on a large Erlenmeyer flask. Once enough material was concentrated on the filter (visible confirmation), vacuum pressure was released and a 60-mL acid-cleaned polyethylene tube, rinsed with boiling reverse osmosis water, was suspended below the filtration head within the Erlenmeyer flask. Then, 40 mL of boiling reverse osmosis water was poured directly into the filter funnel. The water was left for 10 minutes and then vacuum pressure restored and the filtrate was collected in the suspended tube. Following collection of the filtrate, the tube was sealed and placed immediately into the -20degC freezer. Following the above-mentioned protocol, a subsample of the boiling reverse osmosis water was also collected as a blank for every sample day.

References

  1. Q. Dortch, Effect of growth conditions on accumulation of internal nitrate, ammonium, amino acids, and protein in three marine diatoms. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 61, 243–264 (1982).

  2. K. Grasssshoff, K. Kremling, M. Ehrhardt, “Frontmatter” in Methods of Seawater Analysis, (John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 1999), pp. i–xxxii.

  3. R. W. Macdonald, F. A. McLaughlin, C. S. Wong, The storage of reactive silicate samples by freezing. Limnology and Oceanography 31, 1139–1142 (1986).

Sample Collection 4
Sampling Instrument Name
Ice thickness tape
Standardized Sampling Instrument Name
Sample Collection Method Name
Ice sample collection
Comment
Method Link
Method Summary

Data were collected every 4 days between 19 May and 8 June. Snow depths were measured at every core extraction location, with targeted sampling of three different sites to capture the available range of snow depth conditions, including thin (17 cm) snow covers. Bottom-ice samples were collected from each of these extraction locations using a Kovacs Mark II coring system (9-cm inner diameter) and processed for analysis of i) bottom-ice chlorophyll a concentration (chl a) and community composition, ii) intracellular nutrients and, iii) bottom-ice bulk nutrients.

For quantitative measurements of bottom-ice chl a and community composition, up to three ice cores were extracted from each site and the bottom 3 cm were pooled into isothermal containers before melt in 0.2-m filtered seawater (FSW) to limit osmotic shock to the algae during melt processing. The FSW-diluted core solution was melted in the dark over a 15 to 20-hr period. For intracellular nutrient measurements, a bottom-ice scrape sample was collected from 1-3 cores per sampling site depending on visible algal coloration. The scrape procedure used a stainless-steel knife to scrape off the soft skeletal bottom-ice layer, which contained the strongest coloration of algal matter (<0.5 cm), directly into 500 mL of FSW at a temperature near freezing. This technique minimizes stress on algal cells during ice melt processing by: i) maintaining sample salinities similar to growth conditions at the ice-ocean interface, and ii) reducing time of exposure to potentially stressful melt conditions, as all scrape samples were processed within 3 hr of collection. For bulk ice nutrient measurements, the bottom 3 cm of an ice core was collected and placed immediately into a sterile bag (Nasco Whirl-Pak) and then melted over a 15 to 20-hr period in the dark.

Sample Collection 5
Sampling Instrument Name
Niskin sampler
Standardized Sampling Instrument Name
Niskin Bottle
Sample Collection Method Name
Water sampling
Comment
Method Link
Method Summary

A Niskin sampler was lowered through an ice hole to collect water at a 2-m depth.

Activity Collection Type Field Measurement
Preferred citation
Analytical Instrument
Analytical Instrument 1
Analytical Instrument Name
Cond 330i, WTW
Standardized Analytical Instrument Name
Analytical Instrument Identifier Id
Analytical Instrument Identifier Type
Analytical Instrument 2
Analytical Instrument Name
10-005R Turner Designs fluorometer
Standardized Analytical Instrument Name
Analytical Instrument Identifier Id
Analytical Instrument Identifier Type
Analytical Method
Analytical Method 1
Analytical Method Name
Bulk Ice Salinity
Method Link
Method Summary

Instrument: Cond 330i, WTW

Melt ice core without filtered seawater dilution and measure salinity at room temperature.

Laboratory
Comments
Variables Measured
  • Salinity
Analytical Method 2
Analytical Method Name
Bottom ice chlorophyll (chl) a concentration
Method Link
Method Summary

Instrument: 10-005R Turner Designs fluorometer

Melted ice core samples were filtered onto Whatman GF/F glass fiber filters (nominal pore size of 0.7 µm) for analysis of bottom-ice chl a. Filters were placed in 90% acetone for 18 to 24 hr, and the extracted chl a was measured before and after acidification with 5% HCl using a 10-005R Turner Designs fluorometer. All measurements were made with ice core melt using 3:1 filtered seawater dilution and corrected for the dilution.

Laboratory
Comments
Variables Measured
  • Chl a concentration
Analytical Method 3
Analytical Method Name
Algal Taxonomy
Method Link
Method Summary

Instrument: Inverted Microscope

Melted ice core samples were preserved with acidic Lugol’s solution (Parsons et al. 1984) and stored in the dark at 4°C for later analysis of cell identification and enumeration. Cells > 4 µm were identified to the lowest possible taxonomic rank using inverted microscopy according to (Lund et al. 1958); however, information is only presented on total autotrophic cell abundance and percent contribution of pennate diatoms. All measurements were made with ice core melt using 3:1 filtered seawater dilution and corrected for the dilution.

References:

  1. T. R. Parsons, Y. Maita, C. M. Lalli, A Manual of Chemical and Biological Methods for Seawater Analysis. (Pergamon Press, 1984) https:/doi.org/10.25607/OBP-1830 (March 4, 2024).

  2. J. W. G. Lund, C. Kipling, E. D. Le Cren, The inverted microscope method of estimating algal numbers and the statistical basis of estimations by counting. Hydrobiologia 11, 143–170 (1958).

Laboratory
Comments
Variables Measured
  • Percent contribution of main algal taxa
Analytical Method 4
Analytical Method Name
Macronutrient concentrations
Method Link
Method Summary

Sample was filtered through pre-combusted (450degC for 5 hr) Whatman GF/F filters using a sterilized syringe. Filtrate was collected in acid-cleaned polyethylene tubes after three rinses with the filtrate, and stored at -20degC until analysis within 6 months using a Bran-Luebbe 3 autoanalyzer (adapted from (Grasshoff et al. 1999)). Samples were analyzed for nitrate+nitrite, phosphate and silicic acid. Samples for Si(OH)4 determination were thawed for at least 24 hr to minimize the issue of silicate polymerization when samples have been stored by freezing (Macdonald et al. 1986).

Bulk ice nutrients - samples were from ice cores melted without filtered seawater addition

Water Column - 2 m water depth

Intracellular Nutrients - The method used to extract the intracellular nutrient pool was adapted from (Dortch 1982). Within 3 hr of collection, a subsample from the scrape sample was filtered onto a pre-combusted (450°C for 5 h) Whatman GF/F filter within an acid-cleaned filter head mounted on a large Erlenmeyer flask. Once enough material was concentrated on the filter (visible confirmation), vacuum pressure was released and a 60-mL acid-cleaned polyethylene tube, rinsed with boiling reverse osmosis water, was suspended below the filtration head within the Erlenmeyer flask. Then, 40 mL of boiling reverse osmosis water was poured directly into the filter funnel. The water was left for 10 minutes and then vacuum pressure restored and the filtrate was collected in the suspended tube. Following collection of the filtrate, the tube was sealed and placed immediately into the -20degC freezer. Following the abovementioned protocol, a subsample of the boiling reverse osmosis water was also collected as a blank for every sample day.

Q. Dortch, Effect of growth conditions on accumulation of internal nitrate, ammonium, amino acids, and protein in three marine diatoms. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 61, 243–264 (1982).

K. Grasssshoff, K. Kremling, M. Ehrhardt, “Frontmatter” in Methods of Seawater Analysis, (John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, 1999), pp. i–xxxii.

R. W. Macdonald, F. A. McLaughlin, C. S. Wong, The storage of reactive silicate samples by freezing. Limnology and Oceanography 31, 1139–1142 (1986).

Laboratory
Comments
Variables Measured
  • Macronutrient concentrations
Field Value
License Name Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Licence Type Open
Embargo Date
Licence URL https://spdx.org/licenses
Terms of Access

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Field Value
Dataset Authors
Dataset Authors 1
Name
Mundy, CJ
Type of Name
Personal
Email
cj.mundy@umanitoba.ca
Affiliation
Centre for Earth Observation Science - University of Manitoba
ORCID ID
0000-0001-5945-8305
Contributors
Contributors 1
Name
Gosselin, Michel
Role
Project Member
Email
michel_gosselin@uqar.ca
Affiliation
Université du Québec à Rimouski
ORCID ID
Project Data Curator Mundy, CJ
Project Data Curator email cj.mundy@umanitoba.ca
Project Data Curator Affiliation Centre for Earth Observation Science - University of Manitoba
Awards
Awards 1
Award Title
Discovery and Northern Research Supplements
Website
Funder Name
NSERC
Funder Identifier Code
Funder Identifier Type
Funder Identifier Scheme
Grant Number
Awards 2
Award Title
Network Project and Aircraft support
Website
Funder Name
ArcticNet NCE
Funder Identifier Code
Funder Identifier Type
Funder Identifier Scheme
Grant Number
Awards 3
Award Title
Start-up Grant (Mundy)
Website
Funder Name
University of Manitoba
Funder Identifier Code
Funder Identifier Type
Funder Identifier Scheme
Grant Number
Awards 4
Award Title
Logistical Support
Website
Funder Name
Polar Continental Shelf Project
Funder Identifier Code
Funder Identifier Type
Funder Identifier Scheme
Grant Number
Field Value
Related Resources
Related Resources 1
Related Resource Name
Resource Code
Identifier Type
Relationship To This Dataset
Resource Type
Online Resource
Type
Series Name
Field Value
Publications
Publications 1
Publication Name
Identifier Code
Identifier Type
Relationship to this dataset
Resource Type
Online Resource
Publication Type