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Dive into the research topics where Amber L. Annett is active.

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Featured researches published by Amber L. Annett.


Polar Biology | 2010

Seasonal progression of diatom assemblages in surface waters of Ryder Bay, Antarctica

Amber L. Annett; Damien S. Carson; Xavier Crosta; Andrew Clarke; Raja S. Ganeshram

Phytoplankton assemblages from seasonally sea-ice covered Ryder Bay (Adelaide Island, Antarctica) were studied over three austral summers (2004–2007), to link sea-ice variability and environmental conditions with algal speciation. Typical of near-shore Antarctic waters, biomass was dominated by large diatoms, although the prymnesiophyte Phaeocystis antarctica was numerically dominant. Although there was considerable interannual variability between main diatom species, high biomass of certain species or species groups corresponded consistently to certain phases of seasonal progression. We present the first documentation of an extensive bloom of the late-season diatom Proboscia inermis in February 2006, accounting for over 90% of diatom biomass. At this time, water column stratification and nutrient drawdown were high relative to other periods of the study, although carbon export was relatively low. Melt water flux in this region promotes well-stratified surface waters and high chlorophyll levels, but not necessarily concurrent increases in export production relative to seasons with lower freshwater inputs.


Journal of Phycology | 2010

Copper uptake kinetics of coastal and oceanic diatoms

Jian Guo; Amber L. Annett; Rebecca L. Taylor; Suzanne E. Lapi; Thomas J. Ruth; Maria T. Maldonado

We investigated copper (Cu) acquisition mechanisms and uptake kinetics of the marine diatoms Thalassiosira oceanica Hasle, an oceanic strain, and Thalassiosira pseudonana Hasle et Heimdal, a coastal strain, grown under replete and limiting iron (Fe) and Cu availabilities. The Cu‐uptake kinetics of these two diatoms followed classical Michaelis–Menten kinetics. Biphasic uptake kinetics as a function of Cu concentration were observed, suggesting the presence of both high‐ and low‐affinity Cu‐transport systems. The half‐saturation constants (Km) and the maximum Cu‐uptake rates (Vmax) of the high‐affinity Cu‐transport systems (∼7–350 nM and 1.5–17 zmol · μm−2 · h−1, respectively) were significantly lower than those of the low‐affinity systems (>800 nM and 30–250 zmol · μm−2 · h−1, respectively). The two Cu‐transport systems were controlled differently by low Fe and/or Cu. The high‐affinity Cu‐transport system of both diatoms was down‐regulated under Fe limitation. Under optimal‐Fe and low‐Cu growth conditions, the Km of the high‐affinity transport system of T. oceanica was lower (7.3 nM) than that of T. pseudonana (373 nM), indicating that T. oceanica had a better ability to acquire Cu at subsaturating concentrations. When Fe was sufficient, the low‐affinity Cu‐transport system of T. oceanica saturated at 2,000 nM Cu, while that of T. pseudonana did not saturate, indicating different Cu‐transport regulation by these two diatoms. Using CuEDTA as a model organic complex, our results also suggest that diatoms might be able to access Cu bound within organic Cu complexes.


Antarctic Science | 2013

Use of radium isotopes to estimate mixing rates and trace sediment inputs to surface waters in northern Marguerite Bay, Antarctic Peninsula

Amber L. Annett; Sian F. Henley; Pieter van Beek; Marc Souhaut; Raja S. Ganeshram; Hugh J. Venables; Michael P. Meredith; Walter Geibert

Abstract In the western Antarctic Peninsula region, micronutrient injection facilitates strong plankton blooms that support productive food webs, unlike large areas of the low-productivity Southern Ocean. We use naturally occurring radioisotopes of radium to constrain rates of chemical fluxes into Ryder Bay (a small coastal embayment in northern Marguerite Bay), and hence to evaluate possible sources of sediment-derived micronutrients and estimate sediment-ocean mixing rates. We present the first coupled, short-lived radium isotope (223Ra and 224Ra) measurements from Antarctic waters, both present at very low activities (mean 0.155 and 3.21 dpm m-3, respectively), indicating much lower radium inputs than in other coastal environments. Longer-lived 228Ra activity was also lower than existing nearshore values, but higher than open ocean waters, indicating some degree of coastal radium input on timescales exceeding the week-to-month range reflected by 223Ra and 224Ra. Using a simple diffusion model along a shore to mid-bay transect, effective horizontal eddy diffusivity estimates ranged from 0.22–0.83 m2 s-1 from 223Ra and 224Ra, respectively, much lower than already-low mixing estimates for the Southern Ocean. Significant radium enrichment and much faster mixing (18 m2 s-1) was found near a marine-terminating glacier and consequently any sediment-derived micronutrient inputs in this location are more probably dominated by glacial processes than groundwater, land runoff, or marine sediment sources.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2018

A ‘shallow bathtub ring’ of local sedimentary iron input maintains the Palmer Deep biological hotspot on the West Antarctic Peninsula shelf

Robert M. Sherrell; Amber L. Annett; Jessica N. Fitzsimmons; Vincent J. Roccanova; Michael P. Meredith

Palmer Deep (PD) is one of several regional hotspots of biological productivity along the inner shelf of the West Antarctic Peninsula. The proximity of hotspots to shelf-crossing deep troughs has led to the ‘canyon hypothesis’, which proposes that circumpolar deep water flowing shoreward along the canyons is upwelled on the inner shelf, carrying nutrients including iron (Fe) to surface waters, maintaining phytoplankton blooms. We present here full-depth profiles of dissolved and particulate Fe and manganese (Mn) from eight stations around PD, sampled in January and early February of 2015 and 2016, allowing the first detailed evaluation of Fe sources to the areas euphotic zone. We show that upwelling of deep water does not control Fe flux to the surface; instead, shallow sediment-sourced Fe inputs are transported horizontally from surrounding coastlines, creating strong vertical gradients of dissolved Fe within the upper 100 m that supply this limiting nutrient to the local ecosystem. The supply of bioavailable Fe is, therefore, not significantly related to the canyon transport of deep water. Near shore time-series samples reveal that local glacial meltwater appears to be an important Mn source but, surprisingly, is not a large direct Fe input to this biological hotspot. This article is part of the theme issue ‘The marine system of the West Antarctic Peninsula: status and strategy for progress in a region of rapid change’.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Seasonal iron depletion in temperate shelf seas

Antony J. Birchill; Angela Milne; E. Malcolm S. Woodward; Carolyn Harris; Amber L. Annett; Dagmara Rusiecka; Eric P. Achterberg; Martha Gledhill; Simon J. Ussher; Paul J. Worsfold; Walter Geibert; Maeve C. Lohan

Our study followed the seasonal cycling of soluble (SFe), colloidal (CFe), dissolved (DFe), total dissolvable (TDFe), labile particulate (LPFe) and total particulate (TPFe) iron in the Celtic Sea (NE Atlantic Ocean). Preferential uptake of SFe occurred during the spring bloom, preceding the removal of CFe. Uptake and export of Fe during the spring bloom, coupled with a reduction in vertical exchange, led to Fe deplete surface waters (<0.2 nM DFe; 0.11 nM LPFe, 0.45 nM TDFe, 1.84 nM TPFe) during summer stratification. Below the seasonal thermocline, DFe concentrations increased from spring to autumn, mirroring NO3- and consistent with supply from remineralised sinking organic material, and cycled independently of particulate Fe over seasonal timescales. These results demonstrate that summer Fe availability is comparable to the seasonally Fe limited Ross Sea shelf, and therefore is likely low enough to affect phytoplankton growth and species composition.


Limnology and Oceanography | 2008

The effects of Cu and Fe availability on the growth and Cu:C ratios of marine diatoms

Amber L. Annett; Suzanne E. Lapi; Thomas J. Ruth; Maria T. Maldonado


Marine Chemistry | 2015

Comparative roles of upwelling and glacial iron sources in Ryder Bay, coastal western Antarctic Peninsula

Amber L. Annett; Marta Skiba; Sian F. Henley; Hugh J. Venables; Michael P. Meredith; Peter J. Statham; Raja S. Ganeshram


Biogeosciences | 2011

Factors influencing the stable carbon isotopic composition of suspended and sinking organic matter in the coastal Antarctic sea ice environment

Sian F. Henley; Amber L. Annett; Raja S. Ganeshram; Darrell S Carson; Keith Weston; Xavier Crosta; A. Tait; J. Dougans; Anthony E. Fallick; Andrew Clarke


Marine Chemistry | 2017

Controls on dissolved and particulate iron distributions in surface waters of the Western Antarctic Peninsula shelf

Amber L. Annett; Jessica N. Fitzsimmons; Marie J.M. Séguret; Maria Lagerström; Michael P. Meredith; Oscar Schofield; Robert M. Sherrell


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2017

Macronutrient supply, uptake and recycling in the coastal ocean of the west Antarctic Peninsula

Sian F. Henley; Robyn E. Tuerena; Amber L. Annett; Anthony E. Fallick; Michael P. Meredith; Hugh J. Venables; Andrew Clarke; Raja S. Ganeshram

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Andrew Clarke

British Antarctic Survey

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Dagmara Rusiecka

National Oceanography Centre

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Maeve C. Lohan

National Oceanography Centre

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