Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Gabriela Laura Campana is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Gabriela Laura Campana.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Evidence of macroalgal colonization on newly ice-free areas following glacial retreat in Potter Cove (South Shetland Islands), Antarctica

Maria Liliana Quartino; Dolores Deregibus; Gabriela Laura Campana; Gustavo Edgar Juan Latorre; Fernando Momo

Climate warming has been related to glacial retreat along the Western Antarctic Peninsula. Over the last years, a visible melting of Fourcade Glacier (Potter Cove, South Shetland Islands) has exposed newly ice-free hard bottom areas available for benthic colonization. However, ice melting produces a reduction of light penetration due to an increase of sediment input and higher ice impact. Seventeen years ago, the coastal sites close to the glacier cliffs were devoid of macroalgae. Are the newly ice-free areas suitable for macroalgal colonization? To tackle this question, underwater video transects were performed at six newly ice-free areas with different degree of glacial influence. Macroalgae were found in all sites, even in close proximity to the retreating glacier. We can show that: 1. The complexity of the macroalgal community is positively correlated to the elapsed time from the ice retreat, 2. Algae development depends on the optical conditions and the sediment input in the water column; some species are limited by light availability, 3. Macroalgal colonization is negatively affected by the ice disturbance, 4. The colonization is determined by the size and type of substrate and by the slope of the bottom. As macroalgae are probably one of the main energy sources for the benthos, an expansion of the macroalgal distribution can be expected to affect the matter and energy fluxes in Potter Cove ecosystem.


Journal of Phycology | 2009

SENSITIVITY OF ANTARCTIC UROSPORA PENICILLIFORMIS (ULOTRICHALES, CHLOROPHYTA) TO ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION IS LIFE-STAGE DEPENDENT(1).

Michael Y. Roleda; Gabriela Laura Campana; Christian Wiencke; Dieter Hanelt; Maria Liliana Quartino; Angela Wulff

The sensitivity of different life stages of the eulittoral green alga Urospora penicilliformis (Roth) Aresch. to ultraviolet radiation (UVR) was examined in the laboratory. Gametophytic filaments and propagules (zoospores and gametes) released from filaments were separately exposed to different fluence of radiation treatments consisting of PAR (P = 400–700 nm), PAR + ultraviolet A (UVA) (PA, UVA = 320–400 nm), and PAR + UVA + ultraviolet B (UVB) (PAB, UVB = 280–320 nm). Photophysiological indices (ETRmax, Ek, and α) derived from rapid light curves were measured in controls, while photosynthetic efficiency and amount of DNA lesions in terms of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) were measured after exposure to radiation treatments and after recovery in low PAR; pigments of propagules were quantified after exposure treatment only. The photosynthetic conversion efficiency (α) and photosynthetic capacity (rETRmax) were higher in gametophytes compared with the propagules. The propagules were slightly more sensitive to UVB‐induced DNA damage; however, both life stages of the eulittoral inhabiting turf alga were not severely affected by the negative impacts of UVR. Exposure to a maximum of 8 h UVR caused mild effects on the photochemical efficiency of PSII and induced minimal DNA lesions in both the gametophytes and propagules. Pigment concentrations were not significantly different between PAR‐exposed and PAR + UVR–exposed propagules. Our data showed that U. penicilliformis from the Antarctic is rather insensitive to the applied UVR. This amphi‐equatorial species possesses different protective mechanisms that can cope with high UVR in cold‐temperate waters of both hemispheres and in polar regions under conditions of increasing UVR as a consequence of further reduction of stratospheric ozone.


Botanica Marina | 2009

Drivers of colonization and succession in polar benthic macro- and microalgal communities

Gabriela Laura Campana; Katharina Zacher; Anna Fricke; Markus Molis; Angela Wulff; Maria Liliana Quartino; Christian Wiencke

Information on succession in marine benthic primary producers in polar regions is very scarce, particularly with regard to effects of abiotic and biotic drivers of community structure. Primary succession begins with rapid colonizers, such as diatoms and ephemeral macroalgae, whereas slow, highly seasonal recruitment and growth are characteristic of annual or perennial seaweed species. Colonization of intertidal and subtidal assemblages on polar rocky shores is severely affected by physical disturbance and by seasonal changes in abiotic conditions. Biotic factors, such as grazing, can strongly affect colonization patterns and also alter competitive interactions among benthic algae. Ambient UV radiation affects the diversity of macroalgal communities during early and later stages of succession. In contrast, microalgal assemblages have high tolerance to UV stress. Climate warming could alter algal latitudinal distribution and favor invasion of polar regions by cold-temperate species. Reduced sea ice cover and retreating glaciers could expand colonization areas but alter light, salinity, sedimentation and disturbance processes. Although the key role of macroalgae in coastal systems and, to a much reduced extent, the importance of microphytobenthos have been documented for polar regions, information on the successional process is incomplete and will benefit from further ecological studies.


Antarctic Science | 2011

The biology of an Antarctic rhodophyte, Palmaria decipiens: recent advances

Susanne Becker; Maria Liliana Quartino; Gabriela Laura Campana; Philip Bucolo; Christian Wiencke; Kai Bischof

Abstract Palmaria decipiens (Reinsch) R.W. Ricker (1987) represents one of the dominant rhodophyte species in Antarctic coastal ecosystems. Due to its high abundance in the intertidal and upper subtidal it plays a key role in ecosystem structure and function, providing habitat, food and shelter for a multitude of associated organisms. The physiology, reproductive strategy and life cycle of P. decipiens is considered as being well adapted to the Antarctic environment, which is characterized by permanent low water temperatures and a strong seasonality in light climate. With its obvious ecological significance and adaptive strategies P. decipiens was frequently studied as a typical representative of an endemic Antarctic macroalga. Here we provide an overview of the recent literature, summarizing the knowledge gained about the alga during the last 25 years. This review focuses on the species life cycle and physiological responses, such as temperature requirements, photosynthetic characteristics, pigment content and protective mechanisms with regard to enhanced ultraviolet radiation (UV-B radiation, 280–315 nm and UV-A radiation, 315–400 nm). The ecology of P. decipiens is reviewed focussing on grazing activity and abundance patterns. Since most studies on P. decipiens have been conducted at King George Island off the western Antarctic Peninsula this overview serves as a summary of baseline data from an ecosystem particularly prone to environmental change.


Polar Record | 2017

Understanding the link between sea ice, ice scour and Antarctic benthic biodiversity - the need for cross-station and international collaboration

Dolores Deregibus; Maria Liliana Quartino; Katharina Zacher; Gabriela Laura Campana; David K. A. Barnes

The western Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) is a hotspot of rapid recent regional ‘climate change’. This has resulted in a 0.4°C rise in sea temperature in the last 50 years, five days of sea ice lost per decade and increased ice scouring in the shallows. The WAP shallows are ideal for studying the biological response to physical change because most known Antarctic species are benthic, physical change occurs mainly in the shallows and most research stations are coastal. Studies at Rothera Station have found increased benthic disturbance with losses of winter sea ice and assemblage-level changes coincident with this ice scouring. Such studies are difficult to scale up as they depend on SCUBA diving – a very spatially limited technique. Here we report attempts to broaden the understanding of benthic ecosystem responses to physical change by replicating the Rothera experimental grids at Carlini Station through collaboration between the UK, Argentina and Germany across Signy, Rothera and Carlini stations. We argue that such collaborations are the way forward towards understanding the big picture of biota responses to physical climate changes at a regional scale.


Polar Biology | 2016

Photosynthetic light requirements and vertical distribution of macroalgae in newly ice-free areas in Potter Cove, South Shetland Islands, Antarctica

Dolores Deregibus; Maria Liliana Quartino; Gabriela Laura Campana; Fernando Momo; Christian Wiencke; Katharina Zacher


Archive | 2008

Impacts of UV radiation and grazing on the structure of a subtidal benthic diatom assemblage in Antarctica

Gabriela Laura Campana; Maria Liliana Quartino; Adil Y. Al-Handal; Angela Wulff


Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science | 2018

The Food Web of Potter Cove (Antarctica): complexity, structure and function

Tomás I. Marina; Vanesa Salinas; Georgina Cordone; Gabriela Laura Campana; Eugenia Moreira; Dolores Deregibus; Luciana Torre; Ricardo Sahade; Marcos Tatián; Esteban Barrera Oro; Marleen De Troch; Santiago R. Doyle; Maria Liliana Quartino; Leonardo A. Saravia; Fernando Momo


Polar Biology | 2018

Succession of Antarctic benthic algae (Potter Cove, South Shetland Islands): structural patterns and glacial impact over a four year period

Gabriela Laura Campana; Katharina Zacher; Dolores Deregibus; Fernando Momo; Christian Wiencke; Maria Liliana Quartino


EPIC3Wiencke, C., Ferreyra, G., Abele, D., Marenssi, S. (eds): The Potter Cove coastal ecosystem, Antarctica. Synopsis of research performed 1999-2006 at the Dallmann Laboratory and Jubany Station, King George Island (Isla 25 de Mayo). Berichte zur Polar- und , pp. 254-262, ISSN: 1618-3193 | 2008

Photosynthetic performance and impact of ultraviolet radiation on the reproductive cells of Antarctic macroalgae

Michael Y. Roleda; Katharina Zacher; Gabriela Laura Campana; Angela Wulff; Dieter Hanelt; Maria Liliana Quartino; Christian Wiencke

Collaboration


Dive into the Gabriela Laura Campana's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maria Liliana Quartino

Instituto Antártico Argentino

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Katharina Zacher

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dolores Deregibus

Instituto Antártico Argentino

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christian Wiencke

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Angela Wulff

University of Gothenburg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fernando Momo

National University of Luján

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Doris Abele

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kerstin Jerosch

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge