Abstract:
UTLs were used to determine whether whole animal acclimation had occurred in R. perrieri on heated settlement panels in the Antarctic. The panels were placed at 15m depth at two sites (South Cove and North Cove) near Rothera Research Station, Adelaide Island, Antarctic Peninsula (67.06861 S, 68.125 W). Heated and non-heated panels (one each of control, +1, +2) from the South Cove and North Cove sites colonised by R. perrieri were transferred to a 60 L jacketed tank with aerated sea water at the same temperature as the ambient sea water (0 degrees Celsius) and connected to a thermocirculator (Grant Instruments Ltd, Cambridge, UK). The temperature was raised at 1 degree Celsius h-1 with the temperature limit of each animal noted when they no longer responded to tactile stimuli.
Funding was provided by the NERC grant NE/J007501/1.
Keywords:
Acclimation, Antarctic, Romanchella perrieri, Spirorbid, Upper Thermal Limits
Clark, M., Villota Nieva, L., & Peck, L. (2019). Upper Thermal Limits (UTL) experiments on the Antarctic spirorbid Romanchella perrieri (Version 1.0) [Data set]. UK Polar Data Centre, Natural Environment Research Council, UK Research & Innovation. https://doi.org/10.5285/93eaaf9e-0624-441b-81f0-0438b844f6bb
Access Constraints: | None |
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Use Constraints: | Data are released under Open Government Licence V3.0: http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/. |
Creation Date: | 2019-06-14 |
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Dataset Progress: | Complete |
Dataset Language: | English |
ISO Topic Categories: |
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Parameters: |
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Personnel: | |
Name | UK PDC |
Role(s) | Metadata Author |
Organisation | British Antarctic Survey |
Name | Prof Melody S Clark |
Role(s) | Investigator |
Organisation | British Antarctic Survey |
Name | Dr Leyre Villota Nieva |
Role(s) | Investigator |
Organisation | British Antarctic Survey |
Name | Prof Lloyd S Peck |
Role(s) | Investigator |
Organisation | British Antarctic Survey |
Parent Dataset: | N/A |
Reference: | Clark MS, Villota Nieva L, Hoffman JI, Davies AJ, Trivedi UH, Turner F, Ashton GV, Peck LS. Lack of long-term acclimation in Antarctic encrusting species suggests vulnerability to warming. Nature Communications (accepted, in press) | |
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Lineage: | UTL data were non-normal, even after transformations, so non-parametric statistical tests were used to analyse the data. A Mann-Whitney test verified that both the South Cove and North Cove data could be combined (p = 0.0896). A Kruskal-Wallis test was used to investigate if there was an effect of temperature on UTL compared with panel treatment and Mann-Whitney tests were subsequently used on these data to identify significance between panel treatments. |
Temporal Coverage: | |
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Start Date | 2015-01-01 |
End Date | 2016-12-31 |
Spatial Coverage: | |
Latitude | |
Southernmost | -67.57013 |
Northernmost | -67.56641 |
Longitude | |
Westernmost | -68.13622 |
Easternmost | -68.12266 |
Altitude | |
Min Altitude | N/A |
Max Altitude | N/A |
Depth | |
Min Depth | 15 m |
Max Depth | 15 m |
Location: | |
Location | Southern Ocean |
Detailed Location | North Cove, Adelaide Island |
Location | Southern Ocean |
Detailed Location | South Cove, Adelaide Island |
Data Collection: | The EMBRIC Configurator service was used to guide generation of transcriptomic and 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing data (study PRJEB27537 and PRJEB30562, respectively) that are associated with this dataset. |
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Data Storage: | Two worksheets showing UTL temperatures for South Cove and North Cove in .xls file |
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