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MAREDAT: towards a world atlas of MARine Ecosystem DATa

MAREDAT: towards a world atlas of MARine Ecosystem DATa

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_bf0032acc13f4505b8719836cd88f685

MAREDAT: towards a world atlas of MARine Ecosystem DATa

About this item

Full title

MAREDAT: towards a world atlas of MARine Ecosystem DATa

Publisher

Katlenburg-Lindau: Copernicus GmbH

Journal title

Earth system science data, 2013-07, Vol.5 (2), p.227-239

Language

English

Formats

Publication information

Publisher

Katlenburg-Lindau: Copernicus GmbH

More information

Scope and Contents

Contents

We present a summary of biomass data for 11 plankton functional types (PFTs) plus phytoplankton pigment data, compiled as part of the MARine Ecosystem biomass DATa (MAREDAT) initiative. The goal of the MAREDAT initiative is to provide, in due course, global gridded data products with coverage of all planktic components of the global ocean ecosystem. This special issue is the first step towards achieving this. The PFTs presented here include picophytoplankton, diazotrophs, coccolithophores, Phaeocystis, diatoms, picoheterotrophs, microzooplankton, foraminifers, mesozooplankton, pteropods and macrozooplankton. All variables have been gridded onto a World Ocean Atlas (WOA) grid (1 degree 1 degree 33 vertical levels monthly climatologies). The results show that abundance is much better constrained than their carbon content/elemental composition, and coastal seas and other high productivity regions have much better coverage than the much larger volumes where biomass is relatively low. The data show that (1) the global total heterotrophic biomass (2.0-4.6 Pg C) is at least as high as the total autotrophic biomass (0.5-2.4 Pg C excluding nanophytoplankton and autotrophic dinoflagellates); (2) the biomass of zooplankton calcifiers (0.03-0.67 Pg C) is substantially higher than that of coccolithophores (0.001-0.03 Pg C); (3) patchiness of biomass distribution increases with organism size; and (4) although zooplankton biomass measurements below 200 m are rare, the limited measurements available suggest that Bacteria and Archaea are not the only important heterotrophs in the deep sea. More data will be needed to characterise ocean ecosystem functioning and associated biogeochemistry in the Southern Hemisphere and below 200 m. Future efforts to understand marine ecosystem composition and functioning will be helped both by further archiving of historical data and future sampling at new locations. Microzooplankton database: doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.779970 All MAREDAT databases: http://www.pangaea.de/search?&q=maredat...

Alternative Titles

Full title

MAREDAT: towards a world atlas of MARine Ecosystem DATa

Identifiers

Primary Identifiers

Record Identifier

TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_bf0032acc13f4505b8719836cd88f685

Permalink

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_doaj_primary_oai_doaj_org_article_bf0032acc13f4505b8719836cd88f685

Other Identifiers

ISSN

1866-3516,1866-3508

E-ISSN

1866-3516,1866-3508

DOI

10.5194/essd-5-227-2013

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