Field studies of bioluminescence in the Antarctic sector of the Atlantic Ocean in 2002 and 2020

Luminescence. 2021 Dec;36(8):1910-1921. doi: 10.1002/bio.4125. Epub 2021 Aug 9.

Abstract

In this work, IBSS materials on seawater bioluminescence intensity changes in the Atlantic sector of the Antarctic Ocean (the Weddell Sea area) with an interval of almost 20 years are presented. Data were obtained using a single instrument, the hydrobiophysical system Salpa-M, in the area of 50-63°S, 62-49°W in March 2002 (183 soundings at 45 stations during cruise 7 on RV Gorizont) and in February 2020 (122 soundings at 18 stations during cruise 79 on RV Academic Mstislav Keldysh). The bioluminescence studies were coupled with the simultaneous measurement of temperature, electrical conductivity, and photosynthetically active radiation, and they were compared with the data from processing plankton samples. Over the past 20 years, as a consequence of the appearance of a large number of gelatinous organisms and the resulting changes in the structure of the plankton community, the bioluminescence of Antarctic waters in the euphotic layer of this region has decreased almost two-fold, currently being in the range 8.4 × 10-12 to 104.42 × 10-12 W·cm-2 ·L-1 .

Keywords: Atlantic sector of Antarctica; bioluminescence intensity; euphotic zone; plankton.

MeSH terms

  • Antarctic Regions
  • Atlantic Ocean
  • Plankton*
  • Seawater*
  • Temperature