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Dive into the research topics where Luisa Galgani is active.

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Featured researches published by Luisa Galgani.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Stimulated Bacterial Growth under Elevated pCO2: Results from an Off-Shore Mesocosm Study

Sonja Endres; Luisa Galgani; Ulf Riebesell; K. G. Schulz; Anja Engel

Marine bacteria are the main consumers of freshly produced organic matter. Many enzymatic processes involved in the bacterial digestion of organic compounds were shown to be pH sensitive in previous studies. Due to the continuous rise in atmospheric CO2 concentration, seawater pH is presently decreasing at a rate unprecedented during the last 300 million years but the consequences for microbial physiology, organic matter cycling and marine biogeochemistry are still unresolved. We studied the effects of elevated seawater pCO2 on a natural plankton community during a large-scale mesocosm study in a Norwegian fjord. Nine Kiel Off-Shore Mesocosms for Future Ocean Simulations (KOSMOS) were adjusted to different pCO2 levels ranging initially from ca. 280 to 3000 µatm and sampled every second day for 34 days. The first phytoplankton bloom developed around day 5. On day 14, inorganic nutrients were added to the enclosed, nutrient-poor waters to stimulate a second phytoplankton bloom, which occurred around day 20. Our results indicate that marine bacteria benefit directly and indirectly from decreasing seawater pH. During the first phytoplankton bloom, 5–10% more transparent exopolymer particles were formed in the high pCO2 mesocosms. Simultaneously, the efficiency of the protein-degrading enzyme leucine aminopeptidase increased with decreasing pH resulting in up to three times higher values in the highest pCO2/lowest pH mesocosm compared to the controls. In general, total and cell-specific aminopeptidase activities were elevated under low pH conditions. The combination of enhanced enzymatic hydrolysis of organic matter and increased availability of gel particles as substrate supported up to 28% higher bacterial abundance in the high pCO2 treatments. We conclude that ocean acidification has the potential to stimulate the bacterial community and facilitate the microbial recycling of freshly produced organic matter, thus strengthening the role of the microbial loop in the surface ocean.


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 2011

Assessing the optical changes in dissolved organic matter in humic lakes by spectral slope distributions

Luisa Galgani; Antonio Tognazzi; Claudio Rossi; Maso Ricci; J. Angel Galvez; Arduino Massimo Dattilo; Andrés Cózar; Luca Bracchini; Steven Arthur Loiselle

The impact of photodegradation and mixing processes on the optical properties of dissolved organic matter (DOM) was examined using a distribution of absorption spectral slopes and fluorescence measurements in two Argentine lakes. By examining the variability of the absorption spectral slopes throughout the ultraviolet and visible wavelengths, it was possible to determine which wavelength intervals were most sensitive to dominant loss processes. For DOM photodegradation, results show that increases in the absorption spectral slope between 265 and 305 nm were highly sensitive to increased exposure to solar ultraviolet radiation. A slightly larger wavelength range (265-340 nm) was found to be influenced when both mixing and photodegradation processes were considered, in terms DOM residence time, DOM absorption and UV diffuse attenuation coefficients. This same interval of spectral slopes (265-340 nm) was found to highly correlate with changes in fluorescence emission/excitation in wavelengths that are typically associated with terrestrial humic-like DOM. The identification of specific wavelength intervals, rather than the use of standard wavelength intervals or ratios, improved our ability to identify the dominant dissolved organic matter (humic-like) and major loss mechanisms (photodegradation) in these lakes.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Effects of ocean acidification on the biogenic composition of the sea‐surface microlayer: Results from a mesocosm study

Luisa Galgani; Christian Stolle; Sonja Endres; Kai G. Schulz; Anja Engel

The sea-surface microlayer (SML) is the oceans uppermost boundary to the atmosphere and in control of climate relevant processes like gas exchange and emission of marine primary organic aerosols (POA). The SML represents a complex surface film including organic components like polysaccharides, proteins, and marine gel particles, and harbors diverse microbial communities. Despite the potential relevance of the SML in ocean-atmosphere interactions, still little is known about its structural characteristics and sensitivity to a changing environment such as increased oceanic uptake of anthropogenic CO2. Here we report results of a large-scale mesocosm study, indicating that ocean acidification can affect the abundance and activity of microorganisms during phytoplankton blooms, resulting in changes in composition and dynamics of organic matter in the SML. Our results reveal a potential coupling between anthropogenic CO2 emissions and the biogenic properties of the SML, pointing to a hitherto disregarded feedback process between ocean and atmosphere under climate change.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2017

The Ocean's Vital Skin: Toward an Integrated Understanding of the Sea Surface Microlayer

Anja Engel; Hermann W. Bange; Michael Cunliffe; Susannah M. Burrows; Gernot Friedrichs; Luisa Galgani; Hartmut Herrmann; Norbert Hertkorn; Martin Johnson; Peter S. Liss; Patricia K. Quinn; Markus Schartau; Alexander Soloviev; Christian Stolle; Robert C. Upstill-Goddard; Manuela van Pinxteren; Birthe Zäncker

Despite the huge extent of the oceans surface, until now relatively little attention has been paid to the sea surface microlayer (SML) as the ultimate interface where heat, momentum and mass exchange between the ocean and the atmosphere takes place. Via the SML, large-scale environmental changes in the ocean such as warming, acidification, deoxygenation, and eutrophication potentially influence cloud formation, precipitation, and the global radiation balance. Due to the deep connectivity between biological, chemical, and physical processes, studies of the SML may reveal multiple sensitivities to global and regional changes. Understanding the processes at the oceans surface, in particular involving the SML as an important and determinant interface, could therefore provide an essential contribution to the reduction of uncertainties regarding ocean-climate feedbacks. This review identifies gaps in our current knowledge of the SML and highlights a need to develop a holistic and mechanistic understanding of the diverse biological, chemical, and physical processes occurring at the ocean-atmosphere interface. We advocate the development of strong interdisciplinary expertise and collaboration in order to bridge between ocean and atmospheric sciences. Although this will pose significant methodological challenges, such an initiative would represent a new role model for interdisciplinary research in Earth System sciences.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Biopolymers form a gelatinous microlayer at the air-sea interface when Arctic sea ice melts

Luisa Galgani; Judith Piontek; Anja Engel

The interface layer between ocean and atmosphere is only a couple of micrometers thick but plays a critical role in climate relevant processes, including the air-sea exchange of gas and heat and the emission of primary organic aerosols (POA). Recent findings suggest that low-level cloud formation above the Arctic Ocean may be linked to organic polymers produced by marine microorganisms. Sea ice harbors high amounts of polymeric substances that are produced by cells growing within the sea-ice brine. Here, we report from a research cruise to the central Arctic Ocean in 2012. Our study shows that microbial polymers accumulate at the air-sea interface when the sea ice melts. Proteinaceous compounds represented the major fraction of polymers supporting the formation of a gelatinous interface microlayer and providing a hitherto unrecognized potential source of marine POA. Our study indicates a novel link between sea ice-ocean and atmosphere that may be sensitive to climate change.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Polystyrene microplastics increase microbial release of marine Chromophoric Dissolved Organic Matter in microcosm experiments

Luisa Galgani; Anja Engel; Claudio Rossi; Alessandro Donati; Steven Arthur Loiselle

About 5 trillion plastic particles are present in our oceans, from the macro to the micro size. Like any other aquatic particulate, plastics and microplastics can create a micro-environment, within which microbial and chemical conditions differ significantly from the surrounding water. Despite the high and increasing abundance of microplastics in the ocean, their influence on the transformation and composition of marine organic matter is largely unknown. Chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) is the photo-reactive fraction of the marine dissolved organic matter (DOM) pool. Changes in CDOM quality and quantity have impacts on marine microbial dynamics and the underwater light environment. One major source of CDOM is produced by marine bacteria through their alteration of pre-existing DOM substrates. In a series of microcosm experiments in controlled marine conditions, we explored the impact of microplastics on the quality and quantity of microbial CDOM. In the presence of microplastics we observed an increased production of CDOM with changes in its molecular weight, which resulted from either an increased microbial CDOM production or an enhanced transformation of DOM from lower to higher molecular weight CDOM. Our results point to the possibility that marine microplastics act as localized hot spots for microbial activity, with the potential to influence marine carbon dynamics.


Biogeosciences | 2016

The organic sea-surface microlayer in the upwelling region off the coast of Peru and potential implications for air–sea exchange processes

Anja Engel; Luisa Galgani


Biogeosciences | 2016

Changes in optical characteristics of surface microlayers hint to photochemically and microbially mediated DOM turnover in the upwelling region off the coast of Peru

Luisa Galgani; Anja Engel


International Journal of Geosciences | 2013

Accumulation of Gel Particles in the Sea-Surface Microlayer during an Experimental Study with the Diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii

Luisa Galgani; Anja Engel


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Biogenic halocarbons from the Peruvian upwelling region as tropospheric halogen source

Helmke Hepach; Birgit Quack; Susann Tegtmeier; Anja Engel; Astrid Bracher; Steffen Fuhlbrügge; Luisa Galgani; Elliot Atlas; Johannes Lampel; U. Frieß; Kirstin Krüger

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Dive into the Luisa Galgani's collaboration.

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Anja Engel

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Sonja Endres

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Kai G. Schulz

Southern Cross University

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Christian Stolle

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

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Judith Piontek

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Astrid Bracher

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Klaus Jürgens

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

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