Title: Graham Hosie
1Southern Ocean Continuous Plankton Recorder
Survey
Zooplankton Observing System
Graham Hosie SCAR CPR Action Group
2SO-CPR Survey Purpose
- Map the biodiversity and distribution of
zooplankton, including euphausiid (krill) life
stages, in the Southern Ocean. - Use the sensitivity of plankton to environmental
change as early warning indicators of the health
of Southern Ocean. - Serve as reference on the general status of the
Southern Ocean for other monitoring programs - eg CCAMLR Ecosystem Monitoring Program C-EMP
- SOOS
CCAMLR Commission for the Conservation of
Antarctic Marine Living Resources
3CCAMLR-Ecosystem Monitoring ProgrammeC-EMP
- to detect and record significant changes in
critical components of the ecosystem, to serve as
a basis for the conservation of Antarctic marine
living resources - to distinguish between changes due to the
harvesting of commercial species and changes due
to environmental variability, both physical and
biological
David Agnew (1997) Antarctic Science 9(2), 235-242
4SO-CPR Survey Partners Contributors
- Australia - AAD - 1991
- Japan - 1999 (TUMSAT - 2003)
- Germany - AWI - 2004
- New Zealand - 2006
- Great Britain - BAS SAHFOS 2005/06
- USA AMLR NOAA - 2008
- Russia AARI 2008
- South American Consortium OLA CAML 2008/09
- France IPEV AusCPR 2008/09?
- SCAR Action Group on CPR Research (CPRAG) 2006
5How the CPR works
Tow Wire
Propeller
Cover Silk
Gear Box
Preservation Tank
Collecting Silk 270µm
6How the CPR works
Tow Wire
Propeller
Cover Silk
Gear Box
Preservation Tank
Water Plankton
Water Exit
Collecting Silk 270µm
Plankton are trapped on the collecting silk as it
passesacross the tunnel
7How the CPR works
Tow Wire
Propeller
Cover Silk
Gear Box
Preservation Tank
Water Plankton
Water Exit
Collecting Silk 270µm
The collecting silk is then covered by another
silk beforerolling into the Preservation Tank
8How the CPR works
Tow Wire
Propeller
Cover Silk
Gear Box
Preservation Tank
Water Plankton
Water Exit
Collecting Silk 270µm
The mechanism is driven by water passing over the
propeller
9How the CPR works
Tow Wire
Propeller
Cover Silk
Gear Box
Preservation Tank
Water Plankton
Water Exit
Collecting Silk 270µm
CPR is towed horizontally at about 10 m depth,
100 m directly behind ship
Regardless of ship speed, silk advances at 1 cm
for every 1 nautical mile
105m 450 nautical mile tow
- Silks cut to 5 cm segments 5 n miles
11CPR Data Base
Zooplankton Data Spp composition abundance per
5 n mile
Splicing program
GIS Database
Underway Data GPS,T, S, Fluorometer, Light per
1 minute
12Environmental data collected during CPR tows
- Sea-water temperature
- Salinity/conductivity
- Fluorometry
- Light - Photosynthetically Active Radiation
- Solar Radiation
- UV, UVB
- Wind Speed Direction
- Barometric pressure
- Optical Plankton Counter
- Hydroacoustics - 12, 38, 120, 200 khz
- Satellite data - SeaWiFS
13The Survey coversgt70 of the Southern
Ocean October to April
CPR Tows 1991-2008
Approximately40-50 tows each year gt4,000 samples
p.a. 5 n-mile resolution
135,000 nauticalmiles of data havebeen
collected since 1991
This represents morethan 27,000 samples, 200
taxa environmental data
Australia, Japan, NZ, Germany, UK, USA, Russia
14Summary of Tows
CAML 2007-08 25,000 nautical miles
15Oikopleura spp
16Euphausia superba
17Total Abundance
18January 1998 Temperature
1000
12.00
900
10.00
800
8.00
700
600
6.00
Zooplankton per segment
Temperature
500
4.00
400
300
2.00
200
0.00
100
0
-2.00
1
14
27
40
53
66
79
92
105
118
131
144
157
170
183
196
209
222
235
248
261
274
287
300
313
326
339
352
365
378
391
404
417
430
443
456
Segment
66 55S 64 44E
49 21S 130 39E
50 S
52 S
54 S
56 S
58 S
60 S
62 S
64 S
66 S
Hobart
Mawson
19Southern ecotone
40ºS
Hobart
50ºS
60ºS
SACCF
Casey
Mawson
Davis
70ºS
80ºE
90ºE
60ºE
70ºE
110ºE
140ºE
100ºE
120ºE
130ºE
150ºE
160ºE
SACCF Southern Antarctic Circumpolar Current
Front
20Cluster 5
Cluster 2
Cluster 4
Cluster 6
Cluster 1
Cluster 3
9 unique species
1unique species
3 unique species
Hobart
Dumont dUrville
21Future Monitoring
- CPR can readily distinguish
- Regional
- Seasonal
- Annual variation in plankton patterns, and
eventually - Long term patterns
- The SO-CPR Survey is well positioned to provide
early detection of any change in the Southern
Ocean ecosystems - Distinguish natural patterns from
environmental/climatic forcing perturbation
22Japanese Antarctic Research Expeditions
JARE Plankton Observations
NORPAC Net sampling 110 330µm mesh Since JARE
14 1972
23Sustained Observations
Oceanographic observations by JARE
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26Tasks
- summarise knowledge on climate change impacts
on Southern Ocean ecosystems - consider research required to establish an SOS
program to measure rates of change - identify linkages and collaborations needed
to implement SOS
27Structure
- Keynote presentations to stimulate discussion
- Scientific workshops to consider themes
- Open forum presentations and discussion
- Contact sos_at_aad.gov.au
28Plankton know more about climate change than we
do! Prof. Robin Pingree SAHFOS Workshop,
Plymouth, May 2008
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