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Life under ice in the perennial ice-covered Lake Glubokoe in Summer (East Antarctica). / Sharov, Andrey N.; Berezina, Nadezhda A.; Tolstikov, Aleksey V.

In: Lakes and Reservoirs: Research and Management, Vol. 20, No. 2, 01.06.2015, p. 120-127.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Sharov, AN, Berezina, NA & Tolstikov, AV 2015, 'Life under ice in the perennial ice-covered Lake Glubokoe in Summer (East Antarctica)', Lakes and Reservoirs: Research and Management, vol. 20, no. 2, pp. 120-127. https://doi.org/10.1111/lre.12093

APA

Sharov, A. N., Berezina, N. A., & Tolstikov, A. V. (2015). Life under ice in the perennial ice-covered Lake Glubokoe in Summer (East Antarctica). Lakes and Reservoirs: Research and Management, 20(2), 120-127. https://doi.org/10.1111/lre.12093

Vancouver

Sharov AN, Berezina NA, Tolstikov AV. Life under ice in the perennial ice-covered Lake Glubokoe in Summer (East Antarctica). Lakes and Reservoirs: Research and Management. 2015 Jun 1;20(2):120-127. https://doi.org/10.1111/lre.12093

Author

Sharov, Andrey N. ; Berezina, Nadezhda A. ; Tolstikov, Aleksey V. / Life under ice in the perennial ice-covered Lake Glubokoe in Summer (East Antarctica). In: Lakes and Reservoirs: Research and Management. 2015 ; Vol. 20, No. 2. pp. 120-127.

BibTeX

@article{b4c3dde8f4b84bc98f63fd0b4c05916e,
title = "Life under ice in the perennial ice-covered Lake Glubokoe in Summer (East Antarctica)",
abstract = "This study focuses on hydrological and biotic variables in Lake Glubokoe, which is located in Thala Hills of Enderby Land (East Antarctica). Water and sediment samples and physical measurements were collected once a week in the austral summer (19 December 2010 - 6 February 2011). This lake exhibits perennial ice cover that reached a thickness of 2.5-2.7 m during the study period. A very low concentration of planktonic chlorophyll-a (0.06-0.45 μg L-1) was measured in the lake, indicating its ultra-oligotrophic status. The water was poorly populated by algae and metazoans, especially in upper waters below ice cover to a depth of 2 m. Small planktonic organisms (2-5 μm) were observed throughout the study period, but larger organisms (>8 μm) such as the cyanobacteria Planktolyngbya limnetica occurred only during the warmest period (January). Only few individuals of metazoans (rotifers) were found in planktonic samples. Due to deep light penetration (10-15% of incoming active solar radiation reached the depth of 30 m), thick cyanobacterial mats (30 cm) cover all the bottom surface (grey silts) in the lake. Abundant benthic biota associated with these mats was found (up to 1000 ind. m-2). Among the benthic metazoans, bdelloid rotifers and tardigrades were the dominating taxa. The results of this study suggest a typical ecological feature of most subglacial lakes in East Antarctica is that metazoans are very poor in the pelagic zone, preferring instead to occupy an area near the lake bottom because of a favourable constant temperature of 4 °C, good level of dissolved oxygen and available food resources as the bacterial detritus.",
keywords = "Benthos, Continental antarctic, Cyanobacteria mats, Freshwater lake, Plankton",
author = "Sharov, {Andrey N.} and Berezina, {Nadezhda A.} and Tolstikov, {Aleksey V.}",
year = "2015",
month = jun,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/lre.12093",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "120--127",
journal = "Lakes and Reservoirs: Science, Policy and Management for Sustainable Use",
issn = "1320-5331",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Life under ice in the perennial ice-covered Lake Glubokoe in Summer (East Antarctica)

AU - Sharov, Andrey N.

AU - Berezina, Nadezhda A.

AU - Tolstikov, Aleksey V.

PY - 2015/6/1

Y1 - 2015/6/1

N2 - This study focuses on hydrological and biotic variables in Lake Glubokoe, which is located in Thala Hills of Enderby Land (East Antarctica). Water and sediment samples and physical measurements were collected once a week in the austral summer (19 December 2010 - 6 February 2011). This lake exhibits perennial ice cover that reached a thickness of 2.5-2.7 m during the study period. A very low concentration of planktonic chlorophyll-a (0.06-0.45 μg L-1) was measured in the lake, indicating its ultra-oligotrophic status. The water was poorly populated by algae and metazoans, especially in upper waters below ice cover to a depth of 2 m. Small planktonic organisms (2-5 μm) were observed throughout the study period, but larger organisms (>8 μm) such as the cyanobacteria Planktolyngbya limnetica occurred only during the warmest period (January). Only few individuals of metazoans (rotifers) were found in planktonic samples. Due to deep light penetration (10-15% of incoming active solar radiation reached the depth of 30 m), thick cyanobacterial mats (30 cm) cover all the bottom surface (grey silts) in the lake. Abundant benthic biota associated with these mats was found (up to 1000 ind. m-2). Among the benthic metazoans, bdelloid rotifers and tardigrades were the dominating taxa. The results of this study suggest a typical ecological feature of most subglacial lakes in East Antarctica is that metazoans are very poor in the pelagic zone, preferring instead to occupy an area near the lake bottom because of a favourable constant temperature of 4 °C, good level of dissolved oxygen and available food resources as the bacterial detritus.

AB - This study focuses on hydrological and biotic variables in Lake Glubokoe, which is located in Thala Hills of Enderby Land (East Antarctica). Water and sediment samples and physical measurements were collected once a week in the austral summer (19 December 2010 - 6 February 2011). This lake exhibits perennial ice cover that reached a thickness of 2.5-2.7 m during the study period. A very low concentration of planktonic chlorophyll-a (0.06-0.45 μg L-1) was measured in the lake, indicating its ultra-oligotrophic status. The water was poorly populated by algae and metazoans, especially in upper waters below ice cover to a depth of 2 m. Small planktonic organisms (2-5 μm) were observed throughout the study period, but larger organisms (>8 μm) such as the cyanobacteria Planktolyngbya limnetica occurred only during the warmest period (January). Only few individuals of metazoans (rotifers) were found in planktonic samples. Due to deep light penetration (10-15% of incoming active solar radiation reached the depth of 30 m), thick cyanobacterial mats (30 cm) cover all the bottom surface (grey silts) in the lake. Abundant benthic biota associated with these mats was found (up to 1000 ind. m-2). Among the benthic metazoans, bdelloid rotifers and tardigrades were the dominating taxa. The results of this study suggest a typical ecological feature of most subglacial lakes in East Antarctica is that metazoans are very poor in the pelagic zone, preferring instead to occupy an area near the lake bottom because of a favourable constant temperature of 4 °C, good level of dissolved oxygen and available food resources as the bacterial detritus.

KW - Benthos

KW - Continental antarctic

KW - Cyanobacteria mats

KW - Freshwater lake

KW - Plankton

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84935132296&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1111/lre.12093

DO - 10.1111/lre.12093

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:84935132296

VL - 20

SP - 120

EP - 127

JO - Lakes and Reservoirs: Science, Policy and Management for Sustainable Use

JF - Lakes and Reservoirs: Science, Policy and Management for Sustainable Use

SN - 1320-5331

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 16387997