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Title: Images of cellular ultrastructure of benthic foraminifera from Arctic seeps

Type Dataset Bernhard, Joan M., Le Roux, Véronique, Martin, Jonathan B. (2021-11-01): Images of cellular ultrastructure of benthic foraminifera from Arctic seeps. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. Dataset. https://darchive.mblwhoilibrary.org/handle/1912/27782

Authors: Bernhard, Joan M. ; Le Roux, Véronique ; Martin, Jonathan B. ;

Links

Summary

Dissociation of methane hydrates due to ocean warming releases methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, to the atmosphere. Dissociation of gas hydrates may have led to rapid and dramatic environmental changes in the past. Thus, understanding the impact of those events requires information about their timing and magnitudes. While the foraminiferal fossil record provides a powerful tool to understand past environmental conditions, seep-endemic foraminifera are unknown, which limits evaluation of seep-specific information. However, geographically widespread benthic foraminifera do inhabit seep sites, as documented widely in the literature, and may provide information useful to the understanding of past methane releases. In an effort to better understand how benthic foraminifera inhabit this chemosynthesis-based ecosystem, and if they faithfully record the methane emissions, we conducted a multipronged analysis of foraminifera associated with a gas hydrate emission site in the Arctic. Our goal was to simultaneously assess, in single representative calcareous benthic foraminiferal individuals, the cell biology, test stable carbon isotope ratio, and carbonate microstructure (e.g., wall thickness, survey for authigenic overgrowths), from samples collected south of Svalbard, or on Vestnesa Ridge, west of Svalbard). Serially, each specimen was scanned with microCT (computerized tomography) to assess test characteristics, then the test dissolved by acidification while capturing gas to measure stable carbon isotope ratio via continuous-flow mass spectrometry, and finally the remaining soft parts embedded and examined for cell ultrastructure with a Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM). TEM). Data from isotopic analyses, microCT scans and TEM imaging are presented here.

More information

  • URI: https://hdl.handle.net/1912/27782
  • DOI: 10.26025/1912/27782

Subjects

  • Methane seep, Arctic, Storfjordrenna, Vestnesa, Lomvi, Benthic foraminifera, MicroCT scan, Stable carbon isotopes of calcite, Ultrastructure, TEM, Cytology

Dates

  • accessioned: November 24, 2021
  • available: November 24, 2021
  • Publication date: November 01, 2021

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Funding Information

AwardnumberAwarduriFunderidentifierFunderidentifiertypeFundername
This project was funded by NSF (WHOI) OCE-1634469 NSF (UFL) OCE-1634248 Norwegian Research Council 223259

Format

electronic resource

Locations

KindValueGeopoint
Arctic methane seep in Storfjordrenna (CAGE17-2 902; 76 6.920N 16 00.085E; 370m water depth) and nearby control (non-seep) area (CAGE17-2 900; 76 06.916N 16 00.220E; 371m water depth, collected 22 June 2017); Recent / Modern.
Arctic seep (Lomvi, 15 July 2016, P1606-008, 79.0027N, 6.9248W, 1208 m; non-seep control: P1606-020, 79.0075N, 6.8990W, 1207m) and from the oxygen depleted Santa Barbara Basin (California, USA), collected in February 2017 from 581-m water depth (34 17.288N, 120 02.051W).