• BGS Hosted Metadata
  •   Search
  •   Map
  •  Sign in

Wide diversity in the environmental stress response

Three species of Antarctic marine invertebrate: Nacella concinna (limpet), Paraceradocus miersi (crustacean) and Sterechinus neumayeri (urchin) were subjected to three different rates of warming and a two month acclimation trial at 2 degrees Celsius. The rates of warming were 1 degree Celsius per hour, 1 degree Celsius per day and 1 degree Celsius per 3 days. Animals were evaluated to determine whether there was a universal stress response at the cellular level.





Funding was provided from the BAS National Capability Grant, funded by the UKRI Natural Environment Research Council (NERC).

Simple

Date (Creation)
2020-08-27
Date (Revision)
2020-08-27
Date (Publication)
2020-08-27
Date (released)
2020-08-27
Edition

1.0

Unique resource identifier
https://doi.org/10.5285/19c70cf4-6972-42e6-8474-1322b220104f
Codespace

doi

Unique resource identifier
GB/NERC/BAS/PDC/01375
Codespace

https://data.bas.ac.uk/

Other citation details

Please cite this item as: Collins, M., Peck, L., & Clark, M. (2020). Wide diversity in the environmental stress response (Version 1.0) [Data set]. UK Polar Data Centre, Natural Environment Research Council, UK Research & Innovation. https://doi.org/10.5285/19c70cf4-6972-42e6-8474-1322b220104f

Credit

No credit.

Status
Completed
Point of contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

University of Plymouth

Collins, Mike

Author
British Antarctic Survey Peck, Lloyd Author
British Antarctic Survey Clark, Melody Author
NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre

PDCServiceDesk@bas.ac.uk

Point of contact
Maintenance and update frequency
As needed
Maintenance note
Completed
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Biosphere > Ecological Dynamics > Adaptation
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Oceans > Marine Biology > Marine Invertebrates
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Oceans > Marine Environment Monitoring
Theme
  • Acclimation

  • Antarctic

  • Nacella concinna

  • Paraceradocus miersi

  • Sterechinus neumayeri

  • Upper Thermal Limit (UTL)

Place
  • Antarctic Peninsula, Adelaide Island, South Cove near Rothera Research Station Antarctica

GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

  • Habitats and biotopes
  • Oceanographic geographical features
Access constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
no limitations to public access
Access constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
no limitations
Use constraints
License
Other constraints
Open Government Licence v3.0
Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints

This data is governed by the NERC Data Policy: https://www.ukri.org/who-we-are/nerc/our-policies-and-standards/nerc-data-policy/

Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints

This data is governed by the NERC data policy and supplied under Open Government Licence v.3

Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints

None.

Unique resource identifier
url
Codespace

url

Association Type
Cross reference
Spatial representation type
Text, table
Language
English
Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Biota
  • Environment
  • Oceans
N
S
E
W
thumbnail




Begin date
2011-01-01
End date
2012-12-31
Supplemental Information

It is recommended that careful attention be paid to the contents of any data, and that the author be contacted with any questions regarding appropriate use. If you find any errors or omissions, please report them to polardatacentre@bas.ac.uk.

Title

European Petroleum Survey Group (EPSG) Geodetic Parameter Registry

Date (Publication)
2008-11-12
Cited responsible party
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

European Petroleum Survey Group

EPSGadministrator@iogp.org

Publisher
Unique resource identifier
urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::3031
Version

6.18.3

Distributor

Distributor contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role
NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre

PDCServiceDesk@bas.ac.uk

Distributor
Distributor format
Name Version
text/plain
text/csv
Units of distribution

bytes

Transfer size
14336
OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name

WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link

https://ramadda.data.bas.ac.uk/repository/entry/show?entryid=19c70cf4-6972-42e6-8474-1322b220104f

Get Data

Units of distribution

bytes

Transfer size
14336
OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name

WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link

https://ramadda.data.bas.ac.uk/repository/entry/show?entryid=19c70cf4-6972-42e6-8474-1322b220104f

Get Data

Hierarchy level
Dataset
Statement

Methodology:

Three species of Antarctic marine invertebrate: Nacella concinna (limpet), Paraceradocus miersi (crustacean) and Sterechinus neumayeri (urchin) were collected at 8-15m depth from South Cove near Rothera Research Station, Adelaide Island, Antarctic Peninsula (67° 4' 07" S, 68° 07' 30" W). Size metrics were taken for all animals in this study (length, height and width of shell for Nacella concinna, wet weight for Paraceradocus miersi and test diameter for Sterechinus neumayeri).





In the acclimation experiment animals were transferred to aquaria at either control temperature or to aquaria with heaters in to raise the temperature to +2°C. Tank temperatures were recorded daily. The Upper Thermal Limits (UTLs) of a set of control animals at time point 0 were evaluated. This was performed by transferring the animals to a 60 L jacketed tank with aerated sea water at the same temperature as the ambient sea water (0°C) and connected to a thermocirculator (Grant Instruments Ltd, Cambridge, UK). The temperature was raised at 1°C per hour with the temperature limit of each animal noted when they no longer responded to tactile stimuli. This UTL test was repeated at the end of the 2 month period, using the same methodology described above with animals which had been kept at 0°C (control) temperatures for 2 months and also animals which had been kept at 2°C. In the case of the latter, the UTL start temperature was 2°C.





In the thermal ramping experiments animals were transferred to a 60 L jacketed tank with aerated sea water at the same temperature as the ambient sea water (0°C) and connected to a thermocirculator (Grant Instruments Ltd, Cambridge, UK). The temperature was raised at either 1°C per hour, 1°C per day or 1°C per 3 days and the animals sampled at a temperature 10% lower than their previously evaluated UTLs at that particular rate of change. For the longer term experiments (1°C per day or 1°C per 3 days), control animals were sampled at time point 0 and at the end of the experiment. For the 1°C per hour, only one set of controls was needed.

Metadata

File identifier
19c70cf4-6972-42e6-8474-1322b220104f XML
Metadata language
English
Character set
UTF8
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Hierarchy level name

dataset

Date stamp
2020-08-27
Metadata standard name

ISO 19115 Geographic Information - Metadata

Metadata standard version

ISO 19115:2003(E)

Metadata author
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role
NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre

polardatacentre@bas.ac.uk

Point of contact
 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

thumbnail

Keywords

Acclimation Antarctic Nacella concinna Paraceradocus miersi Sterechinus neumayeri Upper Thermal Limit (UTL)
GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

Habitats and biotopes Oceanographic geographical features
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords

EARTH SCIENCE > Biosphere > Ecological Dynamics > Adaptation EARTH SCIENCE > Oceans > Marine Biology > Marine Invertebrates EARTH SCIENCE > Oceans > Marine Environment Monitoring


Provided by

logo

Share on social sites

Access to the catalogue
Read here the full details and access to the data.




  •   About
  •   Github
  •