Novel methods for automated in situ observations of phytoplankton diversity. WP.3, D3.1,Version 9.
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Date
2017Author
Karlson, Bengt
Artigas, Felipe
Créach, Veronique
Louchart, Arnaud
Wacquet, Guilliaume
Seppälä, Jukka
Status
PublishedPages
69pp.
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Phytoplankton forms the base of the marine food web. The number of phytoplankton taxa in the sea have been
estimated to be over 10 000. All of them are primary producers but the ecological function of the different taxa
varies. Many species can not only utilize light as an energy source but also feed on other organisms. Some of the
species are harmful, e.g. producing phycotoxins that may accumulate in sea food and pose a threat to human
health. Phytoplankton vary in size and shape; the size range is approximately 0.8 µm to 0.5 mm. Colonies of cells
may be a few mm in size. Traditionally phytoplankton is monitored by collecting water samples and analysing them
manually using microscopy. This is a good but labour-intensive method. The last few decades novel methodologies
have been developed to be able to process a much larger number of samples compared to microscopy and to do
it automated and autonomously. The novel methodologies include optical methods and also molecular biologi.....
Resource URL
Publisher: http://www.jerico-ri.eu/download/jerico-next-deliverables/JERICO-NEXT-Deliverable-3.1_V9.pdfPublisher
IFREMER for JERICO-NEXTSeries;Nr
JERICO-NEXT-WP3-D3.1;Document Language
enEssential Ocean Variables (EOV)
Phytoplankton biomass and diversityBest Practice Type
GuideCitation
Karlson, B.; Artigas, F.; Créach, V.; Louchart, A.; Wacquet , G. and Seppälä, J. (2017) Novel methods for automated in situ observations of phytoplankton diversity. WP.3, D3.1, Version 9. IFREMER for JERICO-NEXT, 69pp. ( JERICO-NEXT-WP3-D3.1). DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25607/OBP-219Collections