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First release of the Pelagic Size Structure database: global datasets of marine size spectra obtained from plankton imaging devices

Authors :
Dugenne, Mathilde
Corrales-Ugalde, Marco
Luo, Jessica Y.
Kiko, Rainer
O'Brien, Todd D.
Irisson, Jean-Olivier
Lombard, Fabien
Stemmann, Lars
Stock, Charles
Anderson, Clarissa R.
Babin, Marcel
Bhairy, Nagib
Bonnet, Sophie
Carlotti, Francois
Cornils, Astrid
Crockford, E. Taylor
Daniel, Patrick
Desnos, Corinne
Drago, Laetitia
Elineau, Amanda
Fischer, Alexis
Grandrémy, Nina
Grondin, Pierre-Luc
Guidi, Lionel
Guieu, Cecile
Hauss, Helena
Hayashi, Kendra
Huggett, Jenny A.
Jalabert, Laetitia
Karp-Boss, Lee
Kenitz, Kasia M.
Kudela, Raphael M.
Lescot, Magali
Marec, Claudie
McDonnell, Andrew
Mériguet, Zoe
Niehoff, Barbara
Noyon, Margaux
Panaïotis, Thelma
Peacock, Emily
Picheral, Marc
Riquier, Emilie
Roesler, Collin
Romagnan, Jean-Baptiste
Sosik, Heidi M.
Spencer, Gretchen
Taucher, Jan
Tilliette, Chloé
Vilain, Marion
Dugenne, Mathilde
Corrales-Ugalde, Marco
Luo, Jessica Y.
Kiko, Rainer
O'Brien, Todd D.
Irisson, Jean-Olivier
Lombard, Fabien
Stemmann, Lars
Stock, Charles
Anderson, Clarissa R.
Babin, Marcel
Bhairy, Nagib
Bonnet, Sophie
Carlotti, Francois
Cornils, Astrid
Crockford, E. Taylor
Daniel, Patrick
Desnos, Corinne
Drago, Laetitia
Elineau, Amanda
Fischer, Alexis
Grandrémy, Nina
Grondin, Pierre-Luc
Guidi, Lionel
Guieu, Cecile
Hauss, Helena
Hayashi, Kendra
Huggett, Jenny A.
Jalabert, Laetitia
Karp-Boss, Lee
Kenitz, Kasia M.
Kudela, Raphael M.
Lescot, Magali
Marec, Claudie
McDonnell, Andrew
Mériguet, Zoe
Niehoff, Barbara
Noyon, Margaux
Panaïotis, Thelma
Peacock, Emily
Picheral, Marc
Riquier, Emilie
Roesler, Collin
Romagnan, Jean-Baptiste
Sosik, Heidi M.
Spencer, Gretchen
Taucher, Jan
Tilliette, Chloé
Vilain, Marion
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In marine ecosystems, most physiological, ecological, or physical processes are size dependent. These include metabolic rates, the uptake of carbon and other nutrients, swimming and sinking velocities, and trophic interactions, which eventually determine the stocks of commercial species, as well as biogeochemical cycles and carbon sequestration. As such, broad-scale observations of plankton size distribution are important indicators of the general functioning and state of pelagic ecosystems under anthropogenic pressures. Here, we present the first global datasets of the Pelagic Size Structure database (PSSdb), generated from plankton imaging devices. This release includes the bulk particle normalized biovolume size spectrum (NBSS) and the bulk particle size distribution (PSD), along with their related parameters (slope, intercept, and R2) measured within the epipelagic layer (0–200 m) by three imaging sensors: the Imaging FlowCytobot (IFCB), the Underwater Vision Profiler (UVP), and benchtop scanners. Collectively, these instruments effectively image organisms and detrital material in the 7–10 000 µm size range. A total of 92 472 IFCB samples, 3068 UVP profiles, and 2411 scans passed our quality control and were standardized to produce consistent instrument-specific size spectra averaged to 1° × 1° latitude and longitude and by year and month. Our instrument-specific datasets span most major ocean basins, except for the IFCB datasets we have ingested, which were exclusively collected in northern latitudes, and cover decadal time periods (2013–2022 for IFCB, 2008–2021 for UVP, and 1996–2022 for scanners), allowing for a further assessment of the pelagic size spectrum in space and time. The datasets that constitute PSSdb's first release are available at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11050013 (Dugenne et al., 2024b). In addition, future updates to these data products can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7998799.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1455882300
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194.essd-16-2971-2024