Abstract:
Zooplankton samples taken around the island of South Georgia with a vertically hauled N70 plankton net during Discovery Investigations in the 1930s were examined and four species of calanoid copepod enumerated. Stations where complete samples or known fractions were available within the top 250 m were identified. The resulting 151 samples, representing 52 scientific stations, spanned the months November through to early March. Analysis focused on the species Calanoides acutus, Calanus simillimus, Calanus propinquus and Rhincalanus gigas. Previous investigations have used standardised abundances of these species from a wider suite of Discovery samples and compared them with contemporary samples to see whether changes have occurred in the last ~80 years. The intention is that these samples will enable further comparisons within a more tightly defined spatial area.
Keywords:
Copepoda, Discovery Investigations, N70V plankton net, South Georgia
Ward, P., & Tarling, G.A. (2025). Abundance data of 4 species of Calanoid copepods in plankton samples obtained around South Georgia during Discovery Investigations 1927-1937 (Version 1.0) [Data set]. NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre. https://doi.org/10.5285/a9d290ce-4201-4b4b-954e-bbcf07fb1290
| Access Constraints: | None. |
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| Use Constraints: | These data are supplied under Open Government Licence v.3 http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/. |
| Creation Date: | 2025-12-16 |
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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 | Peter Ward |
| Role(s) | Investigator |
| Organisation | British Antarctic Survey |
| Name | Geraint A Tarling |
| Role(s) | Investigator, Technical Contact |
| Organisation | British Antarctic Survey |
| Name | Miranda Lowe |
| Role(s) | Technical Contact |
| Organisation | Natural History Museum |
| Parent Dataset: | N/A |
| Reference: | Anonymous (1931) Station list 1927-1929 Discovery reports 3: 3-132 Anonymous (1932) Station list 1929-1931 Discovery reports 4: 3-230 3-132 Anonymous (1941) Station list 1931-1933 Discovery reports 21: 1-226 Anonymous (1942) Station list 1933-1935 Discovery reports 22: 1-196 Anonymous (1943) Station list 1935-1939 Discovery reports 24: 1-196 Blaxter, J. H., Douglas, B., Tyler, P. A., & Mauchline, J. (1998). The biology of calanoid copepods Reid, D. D., & Parker, R. R. (1984). Estimation of sample zooplankton abundance from Folsom splitter sub-samples. Journal of Plankton Research, 6(5), 721-731. https://doi.org/10.1093/plankt/6.5.721. Kemp, S., Hardy, A.C., & Mackintosh, N.A. (1929) Discovery Investigations, objects, equipment and methods. Part 1The objects of the investigations. Discovery Reports 1: 143-232. Discovery reports can be accessed online at https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/. |
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| Quality: | Overall, condition of the samples was moderate. Some were in excellent condition whereas others were clearly showing the ravages of time and exhibited signs of decay. Nonetheless, the species of interest were readily identifiable. Many samples had been preserved in their entirety, whereas others were represented by preserved fractions or residues. In these cases, the samples had clearly been subjected to a preliminary analysis. Whether the sample examined was a residue, a fraction or an entire sample (whole) is indicated in column E of the spreadsheet. In the column sample fraction analysed, the term L&M refers to copepods large and medium as signified on the sample labels. Visits to NOC Southampton allowed inspection of archived Discovery logbooks and sampling sheets. These indicated that preliminary analysis was restricted to macroplankton (amphipods, pteropods, euphausiids etc). Where copepods had been counted, they were not identified to species level. Samples were assessed for copepod abundance and then split using a 'Folsom' plankton splitter (Reid and Parker, 1984) until countable aliquots were achieved. Copepodite life stages CI-CVI (see Blaxter et al. 1998) of the four species only were enumerated under a binocular microscope. If the sample analysed was a fraction or residue, it was assumed to contain a representative number of the species in question and counts were therefore multiplied accordingly to represent totals in the entire sample. Density (ind. m-2) was determined by using Pir^2 xh where the net radius (r) was 0.35m and h is the height (depth interval) of the water column through which the net was hauled. Data presented are ind. m -2 within the depth horizon sampled by the net. To determine a value for ind. m -2 for the entire water column, it will be necessary to sum each respective depth horizon. Discovery sample analysts were very punctilious about documenting any removals of species/stages from samples and previous experience has indicated that if such occurred sample labels were annotated accordingly. Subsequent to analysis, all samples were transferred to PTFE bottles in Steedmans solution (as the seals on the original 'Kilner jars' were breached and could not be replaced). |
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| Lineage/Methodology: | Samples were collected during a series of Discovery Investigations cruises to South Georgia during the late 1920s and 1930s. Two ships were involved either Discovery II or William Scoresby. N70V plankton nets (Kemp et al. 1929) were deployed and hauled vertically through the following depth horizons 1000-750m, 750-500m, 500-250m, 250-100m 100-50m and 50-0m, where water depth was>1000m. At stations where water depth was <1000m, profiles were adjusted accordingly. Stations of interest were identified from Discovery report Station lists (Anonymous 1931, 1932, 1941, 1942 and 1943). Samples and sample fractions had been preserved in seawater formalin solution and were located in the stacks of the Natural History Museum. My interest was in samples taken within the top 250m during the summer period spanning December to early March. Searching through the samples indicated that, for a proportion of stations, samples were entirely absent or the depth series incomplete. Nonetheless, samples from a total of 34 stations taken by Discovery II and 18 stations by William Scoresby were identified and subsequently analysed. |
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| Temporal Coverage: | |
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| Start Date | 1930-01-30 |
| End Date | 1937-03-09 |
| Start Date | 1927-02-14 |
| End Date | 1929-01-14 |
| Spatial Coverage: | |
| Latitude | |
| Southernmost | -55.78 |
| Northernmost | -50.87 |
| Longitude | |
| Westernmost | -40.6 |
| Easternmost | -34.18 |
| Altitude | |
| Min Altitude | N/A |
| Max Altitude | N/A |
| Depth | |
| Min Depth | N/A |
| Max Depth | N/A |
| Latitude | |
| Southernmost | -54.925 |
| Northernmost | -52.68 |
| Longitude | |
| Westernmost | -38.79 |
| Easternmost | -34.12 |
| Altitude | |
| Min Altitude | N/A |
| Max Altitude | N/A |
| Depth | |
| Min Depth | N/A |
| Max Depth | N/A |
| Location: | |
| Location | Antarctica |
| Detailed Location | South Georgia |
| Data Collection: | N70 plankton net 'Folsom' plankton splitter |
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| Data Storage: | Two files in the CSV format. |
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