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Featured researches published by Hanna M. Kauko.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Leads in Arctic pack ice enable early phytoplankton blooms below snow-covered sea ice

Philipp Assmy; Mar Fernández-Méndez; Pedro Duarte; Amelie Meyer; Achim Randelhoff; Christopher John Mundy; Lasse Mork Olsen; Hanna M. Kauko; Allison Bailey; Melissa Chierici; Lana Cohen; Anthony Paul Doulgeris; Jens K. Ehn; Agneta Fransson; Sebastian Gerland; Haakon Hop; Stephen R. Hudson; Nick Hughes; Polona Itkin; Geir Johnsen; Jennifer King; Boris Koch; Zoé Koenig; Slawomir Kwasniewski; Samuel R. Laney; Marcel Nikolaus; Alexey K. Pavlov; Chris Polashenski; Christine Provost; Anja Rösel

The Arctic icescape is rapidly transforming from a thicker multiyear ice cover to a thinner and largely seasonal first-year ice cover with significant consequences for Arctic primary production. One critical challenge is to understand how productivity will change within the next decades. Recent studies have reported extensive phytoplankton blooms beneath ponded sea ice during summer, indicating that satellite-based Arctic annual primary production estimates may be significantly underestimated. Here we present a unique time-series of a phytoplankton spring bloom observed beneath snow-covered Arctic pack ice. The bloom, dominated by the haptophyte algae Phaeocystis pouchetii, caused near depletion of the surface nitrate inventory and a decline in dissolved inorganic carbon by 16u2009±u20096u2009gu2009C m−2. Ocean circulation characteristics in the area indicated that the bloom developed in situ despite the snow-covered sea ice. Leads in the dynamic ice cover provided added sunlight necessary to initiate and sustain the bloom. Phytoplankton blooms beneath snow-covered ice might become more common and widespread in the future Arctic Ocean with frequent lead formation due to thinner and more dynamic sea ice despite projected increases in high-Arctic snowfall. This could alter productivity, marine food webs and carbon sequestration in the Arctic Ocean.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Winter to summer oceanographic observations in the Arctic Ocean north of Svalbard

Amelie Meyer; Arild Sundfjord; Ilker Fer; Christine Provost; Nicolas Villacieros Robineau; Zoé Koenig; Ingrid H. Onarheim; Lars Henrik Smedsrud; Pedro Duarte; Paul A. Dodd; Robert M. Graham; Sunke Schmidtko; Hanna M. Kauko

Oceanographic observations from the Eurasian Basin north of Svalbard collected between January and June 2015 from the N-ICE2015 drifting expedition are presented. The unique winter observations are a key contribution to existing climatologies of the Arctic Ocean, and show a ∼100m deep winter mixed layer likely due to high sea ice growth rates in local leads. Current observations for the upper ∼200m show mostly a barotropic flow, enhanced over the shallow Yermak Plateau. The two branches of inflowing Atlantic Water are partly captured, confirming that the outer Yermak Branch follows the perimeter of the plateau, and the inner Svalbard Branch the coast. Atlantic Water observed to be warmer and shallower than in the climatology, is found directly below the mixed layer down to 800m depth, and is warmest along the slope, while properties inside the basin are quite homogeneous. From late May onwards, the drift was continually close to the ice edge and a thinner surface mixed layer and shallower Atlantic Water coincided with significant sea ice melt being observed. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Windows in Arctic sea ice: Light transmission and ice algae in a refrozen lead

Hanna M. Kauko; Torbjørn Taskjelle; Philipp Assmy; Alexey K. Pavlov; C. J. Mundy; Pedro Duarte; Mar Fernández-Méndez; Lasse Mork Olsen; Stephen R. Hudson; Geir Johnsen; Ashley Elliott; Feiyue Wang; Mats A. Granskog

The Arctic Ocean is rapidly changing from thicker multiyear to thinner first-year ice cover, with significant consequences for radiative transfer through the ice pack and light availability for algal growth. A thinner, more dynamic ice cover will possibly result in more frequent leads, covered by newly formed ice with little snow cover. We studied a refrozen lead (≤0.27u2009m ice) in drifting pack ice north of Svalbard (80.5–82.4 °N) in May-June 2015 during the Norwegian young sea ICE expedition (N-ICE2015). We measured downwelling incident and ice transmitted spectral irradiance, and colored dissolved organic matter (CDOM), particle absorption, ultraviolet (UV)-protecting mycosporine-like amino acids (MAAs) and chlorophyll a (Chl a) in melted sea ice samples. We found occasionally very high MAA concentrations (up to 39u2009mgu2009m-3, mean 4.5u2009±u20097.8u2009mgu2009m-3) and MAA to Chl a ratios (up to 6.3, mean 1.2u2009±u20091.3). Disagreement in modelled and observed transmittance in the UV range let us conclude that MAA signatures in CDOM absorption spectra may be artefacts due to osmotic shock during ice melting. Although observed PAR transmittance through the thin ice was 5–40 times that of the adjacent thicker ice with deep snow cover, ice algal standing stocks were low (≤2.31u2009mg Chl a m-2) and similar to the adjacent ice. Ice algal accumulation in the lead was possibly delayed by the low inoculum and the time needed for photoacclimation to the high-light environment. However, leads are important for phytoplankton growth by acting like windows into the water column.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

The seeding of ice algal blooms in Arctic pack ice : the multiyear ice seed repository hypothesis

Lasse Mork Olsen; Samuel R. Laney; Pedro Duarte; Hanna M. Kauko; Mar Fernández-Méndez; Christopher John Mundy; Anja Rösel; Amelie Meyer; Polona Itkin; Lana Cohen; Ilka Peeken; Agnieszka Tatarek; Magdalena Róźańska-Pluta; Josef Wiktor; Torbjørn Taskjelle; Alexey K. Pavlov; Stephen R. Hudson; Mats A. Granskog; Haakon Hop; Philipp Assmy

During the Norwegian young sea ICE expedition (N-ICE2015) from January to June 2015 the pack ice in the Arctic Ocean north of Svalbard was studied during four drifts between 83° and 80° N. This pack ice consisted of a mix of second-year, first-year and young ice. The physical properties and ice algal community composition was investigated in the three different ice types during the winter-spring-summer transition. Our results indicate that algae remaining in sea ice that survived the summer melt season are subsequently trapped in the upper layers of the ice column during winter and may function as an algal seed repository. Once the connectivity in the entire ice column is established, as a result of temperature-driven increase in ice porosity during spring, algae in the upper parts of the ice are able to migrate towards the bottom and initiate the ice-algal spring bloom. Furthermore, this algal repository might seed the bloom in younger ice formed in adjacent leads. This mechanism was studied in detail for the often dominating ice diatom Nitzschia frigida.The proposed seeding mechanism may be compromised due to the disappearance of older ice in the anticipated regime shift towards a seasonally ice-free Arctic Ocean.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Altered inherent optical properties and estimates of the underwater light field during an Arctic under ice bloom of Phaeocystis pouchetii

Alexey K. Pavlov; Torbjørn Taskjelle; Hanna M. Kauko; Børge Hamre; Stephen R. Hudson; Philipp Assmy; Pedro Duarte; Mar Fernández-Méndez; C. J. Mundy; Mats A. Granskog

In spring 2015, we observed an extensive phytoplankton bloom of Phaeocystis pouchetii, with chlorophyll a concentrations up to 7.5 mg m−3, under compact snow-covered Arctic sea ice at 80-81˚N during the Norwegian young sea ICE (N-ICE2015) expedition. We investigated the influence of the under-ice bloom on inherent optical properties (IOPs) of the upper ocean. Absorption and scattering in the upper 20 m of the water column at visible wavebands increased threefold and tenfold, respectively, relative to pre-bloom conditions. The scattering-to-absorption ratio during the Phaeocystis under-ice bloom was higher than in previous Arctic studies investigating diatom blooms. During the bloom, absorption by colored dissolved organic matter (at 375 nm), seemingly of autochthonous origin, doubled. Total absorption by particles (at 440 nm), dominated by phytoplankton (> 90%), increased tenfold. Measured absorption and scattering in the water were used as inputs for a 1D coupled atmosphere-ice-ocean radiative transfer model (AccuRT) to investigate effects of altered IOPs on the under-ice light field. Multiple scattering between sea ice and phytoplankton in the ocean led to an increase in scalar irradiance in the photosynthetically active radiation range (Eo(PAR)) at the ice-ocean interface by 6–7% compared to pre-bloom situation. This increase could have a positive feedback on ice-algal and under-ice phytoplankton productivity. The ratio between Eo(PAR) and downwelling planar irradiance (Ed(PAR)) below sea ice reached 1.85. Therefore, the use of Ed(PAR) might significantly underestimate the amount of PAR available for photosynthesis underneath sea ice. Our findings could help to improve light parameterizations in primary production models.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Sea ice thermohaline dynamics and biogeochemistry in the Arctic Ocean: Empirical and model results

Pedro Duarte; Amelie Meyer; Lasse Mork Olsen; Hanna M. Kauko; Philipp Assmy; Anja Rösel; Polona Itkin; Stephen R. Hudson; Mats A. Granskog; Sebastian Gerland; Arild Sundfjord; Harald Steen; Haakon Hop; Lana Cohen; Algot Kristoffer Peterson; Nicole Jeffery; Scott Elliott; Elizabeth C. Hunke; Adrian K. Turner

Large changes in the sea ice regime of the Arctic Ocean have occurred over the last n decades justifying the development of models to forecast sea ice physics and biogeochemistry. n The main goal of this study is to evaluate the performance of the Los Alamos Sea Ice n Model (CICE) to simulate physical and biogeochemical properties at time scales of n a few weeks and to use the model to analyze ice algal bloom dynamics in different n types of ice. Ocean and atmospheric forcing data and observations of the evolution n of the sea ice properties collected from 18 April to 4 June 2015, during the Norwegian n young sea ICE expedition, were used to test the CICE model. Our results show the following: n (i) model performance is reasonable for sea ice thickness and bulk salinity; good n for vertically resolved temperature, vertically averaged Chl a concentrations, and standing stocks; and poor for vertically resolved Chl a concentrations. (ii) Improving current knowledge about nutrient exchanges, ice algal n recruitment, and motion is critical to improve sea ice biogeochemical modeling. (iii) n Ice algae may bloom despite some degree of basal melting. (iv) Ice algal motility n driven by gradients in limiting factors is a plausible mechanism to explain their n vertical distribution. (v) Different ice algal bloom and net primary production (NPP) n patterns were identified in the ice types studied, suggesting that ice algal maximal n growth rates will increase, while sea ice vertically integrated NPP and biomass will n decrease as a result of the predictable increase in the area covered by refrozen leads n in the Arctic Ocean.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Bio‐optical properties of Arctic drift ice and surface waters north of Svalbard from winter to spring

Piotr Kowalczuk; Justyna Meler; Hanna M. Kauko; Alexey K. Pavlov; Monika Zabłocka; Ilka Peeken; Christine Dybwad; Giulia Castellani; Mats A. Granskog

We have quantified absorption by CDOM, aCDOM(k), particulate matter, ap(k), algal pigments, naph(k), and detrital material, aNAP(k), coincident with chlorophyll a in sea ice and surface waters in winter nand spring 2015 in the Arctic Ocean north of Svalbard. The aCDOM(k) was low in contrast to other regions of nthe Arctic Ocean, while ap(k) has the largest contribution to absorption variability in sea ice and surface nwaters. ap(443) was 1.4–2.8 times and 1.3–1.8 times higher than aCDOM(443) in surface water and sea ice, nrespectively. aph(k) contributed 90% and 81% to ap(k), in open leads and under-ice waters column, and nmuch less (53%–74%) in sea ice, respectively. Both aCDOM(k) and ap(k) followed closely the vertical ndistribution of chlorophyll a in sea ice and the water column. We observed a tenfold increase of the nchlorophyll a concentration and nearly twofold increase in absorption at 443 nm in sea ice from winter to nspring. The aCDOM(k) dominated the absorption budget in the UV both in sea ice and surface waters. In the nvisible range, absorption was dominated by aph(k), which contributed more than 50% and aCDOM(k), which ncontributed 43% to total absorption in water column. Detrital absorption contributed significantly (33%) nonly in surface ice layer. Algae dynamics explained more than 90% variability in ap(k) and aph(k) in water ncolumn, but less than 70% in the sea ice. This study presents detailed absorption budget that is relevant for nmodeling of radiative transfer and primary production.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2018

Algal hot spots in a changing Arctic Ocean: Sea-ice ridges and the snow-ice interface

Mar Fernández-Méndez; Lasse Mork Olsen; Hanna M. Kauko; Amelie Meyer; Anja Rösel; Ioanna Merkouriadi; Christopher John Mundy; Jens K. Ehn; Malin Johansson; Penelope Mae Wagner; Åse Ervik; Bk Sorrell; Pedro Duarte; Anette Wold; Haakon Hop; Phillipp Assmy

During the N-ICE2015 drift expedition north-west of Svalbard, we observed the establishment and development of algal communities in first-year ice (FYI) ridges and at the snow-ice interface. Despite some indications of being hot spots for biological activity, ridges are under-studied largely because they are complex structures that are difficult to sample. Snow infiltration communities can grow at the snow-ice interface when flooded. They have been commonly observed in the Antarctic, but rarely in the Arctic, where flooding is less common mainly due to a lower snow-to-ice thickness ratio. Combining biomass measurements and algal community analysis with under-ice irradiance and current measurements as well as light modeling, we comprehensively describe these two algal habitats in an Arctic pack ice environment. High biomass accumulation in ridges was facilitated by complex surfaces for algal deposition and attachment, increased light availability, and protection against strong under-ice currents. Notably, specific locations within the ridges were found to host distinct ice algal communities. The pennate diatoms Nitzschia frigida and Navicula species dominated the underside and inclined walls of submerged ice blocks, while the centric diatom Shionodiscus bioculatus dominated the top surfaces of the submerged ice blocks. Higher light levels than those in and below the sea ice, low mesozooplankton grazing, and physical concentration likely contributed to the high algal biomass at the snow-ice interface. These snow infiltration communities were dominated by Phaeocystis pouchetii and chain-forming pelagic diatoms (Fragilariopsis oceanica and Chaetoceros gelidus). Ridges are likely to form more frequently in a thinner and more dynamic ice pack, while the predicted increase in Arctic precipitation in some regions in combination with the thinning Arctic icescape might lead to larger areas of sea ice with negative freeboard and subsequent flooding during the melt season. Therefore, these two habitats are likely to become increasingly important in the new Arctic with implications for carbon export and transfer in the ice-associated ecosystem.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2018

Algal Colonization of Young Arctic Sea Ice in Spring

Hanna M. Kauko; Lasse Mork Olsen; Pedro Duarte; Ilka Peeken; Mats A. Granskog; Geir Johnsen; Mar Fernández-Méndez; Alexey K. Pavlov; Christopher John Mundy; Philipp Assmy

The importance of newly formed sea ice in spring is likely to increase with formation of leads in a more dynamic Arctic icescape. We followed the ice algal species succession in young ice (≤0.27 m) in spring at high temporal resolution (sampling every second day for one month in May–June 2015) in the Arctic Ocean north of Svalbard. We document the early development of the ice algal community based on species abundance and chemotaxonomic marker pigments, and relate the young-ice algal community to the communities in the under-ice water column and the surrounding older ice. The seeding source seemed to vary between algal groups. Dinoflagellates were concluded to originate from the water column and diatoms from the surrounding older ice, which emphasizes the importance of older ice as a seeding source over deep oceanic regions and in early spring when algal abundance in the water column is low. In total, 120 taxa (80 identified to species or genus level) were recorded in the young ice. The protist community developed over the study period from a ciliate, flagellate and dinoflagellate dominated community to one dominated by pennate diatoms. Environmental variables such as light were not a strong driver for the community composition, based on statistical analysis and comparison to the surrounding thicker ice with low light transmission. The photoprotective carotenoids to Chl a ratio increased over time to levels found in other high-light habitats, which shows that the algae were able to acclimate to the light levels of the thin ice. The development into a pennate diatom-dominated community, similar to the older ice, suggests that successional patterns tend towards ice-associated algae fairly independent of environmental conditions like light availability, season or ice type, and that biological traits, including morphological and physiological specialization to the sea ice habitat, play an important role in colonization of the sea ice environment. However, recruitment of ice-associated algae could be negatively affected by the ongoing loss of older ice, which acts as a seeding repository.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Altered inherent optical properties and estimates of the underwater light field during an Arctic under-ice bloom of Phaeocystis pouchetii: BIO-OPTICS OF AN ARCTIC UNDER-ICE BLOOM

Alexey K. Pavlov; Torbjørn Taskjelle; Hanna M. Kauko; Børge Hamre; Stephen R. Hudson; Philipp Assmy; Pedro Duarte; Mar Fernández-Méndez; C. J. Mundy; Mats A. Granskog

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Pedro Duarte

Norwegian Polar Institute

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Philipp Assmy

Norwegian Polar Institute

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Amelie Meyer

Norwegian Polar Institute

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Anja Rösel

Norwegian Polar Institute

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