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Featured researches published by Maike Kramer.


Polar Biology | 2011

Brackish meltponds on Arctic sea ice—a new habitat for marine metazoans

Maike Kramer; Rainer Kiko

Meltponds on Arctic sea ice have previously been reported to be devoid of marine metazoans due to fresh-water conditions. The predominantly dark frequently also green and brownish meltponds observed in the Central Arctic in summer 2007 hinted to brackish conditions and considerable amounts of algae, possibly making the habitat suitable for marine metazoans. Environmental conditions in meltponds as well as sympagic meiofauna in new ice covering pond surfaces and in rotten ice on the bottom of ponds were studied, applying modified techniques from sea-ice and under-ice research. Due to the very porous structure of the rotten ice, the meltponds were usually brackish to saline, providing living conditions very similar to sub-ice water. The new ice cover on the surface had similar characteristics as the bottom layer of level ice. The ponds were thus accessible to and inhabitable by metazoans. The new ice cover and the rotten ice were inhabited by various sympagic meiofauna taxa, predominantly ciliates, rotifers, acoels, nematodes and foraminiferans. Also, sympagic amphipods were found on the bottom of meltponds. We suggest that, in consequence of global warming, brackish and saline meltponds are becoming more frequent in the Arctic, providing a new habitat to marine metazoans.


Polar Biology | 2008

Tergipes antarcticus (Gastropoda, Nudibranchia): distribution, life cycle, morphology, anatomy and adaptation of the first mollusc known to live in Antarctic sea ice

Rainer Kiko; Maike Kramer; Michael Spindler; Heike Wägele

Tergipes antarcticus (Gastropoda, Nudibranchia) has been reported from Antarctic sea ice twice (1903 and 2008). The extent of its distribution and life history remained unclear. We have evaluated data from several cruises, showing that T. antarcticus is widely distributed in sea ice throughout the Weddell Sea. Adults, juveniles, larvae and egg clutches of T. antarcticus were found in the ice indicating that the species reproduces within this habitat. We collected live material of T. antarcticus for a thorough description of all life stages and to investigate the developmental stages and physiological adaptations. Total developmental time from egg to veliger larvae was relatively short with 31 days (range 13–65 days) at 0°C. Liquid withdrawn from egg clutches and adult T. antarcticus showed clear signs of thermal hysteresis. This is the first report of thermal hysteresis from a sea ice metazoan. We conclude that T. antarcticus is an autochthonous species to Antarctic sea ice.


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2011

Antarctic sympagic meiofauna in winter: Comparing diversity, abundance and biomass between perennially and seasonally ice-covered regions

Maike Kramer; Kerrie M. Swadling; Klaus M. Meiners; Rainer Kiko; Annette Scheltz; Marcel Nicolaus; Iris Werner


Marine Biology | 2009

Sympagohydra tuuli (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa): first report from sea ice of the central Arctic Ocean and insights into histology, reproduction and locomotion

Stefan Siebert; Friederike Anton-Erxleben; Rainer Kiko; Maike Kramer


Polar Biology | 2017

Colonization of newly forming Arctic sea ice by meiofauna: a case study for the future Arctic?

Rainer Kiko; Stefan Kern; Maike Kramer; Henrike Mütze


EPIC3Institut für Evolutionsbiologie und Ökologie, Bonn. | 2006

How to survive within sea ice? First insights from Antarctic nudibranchs and copepods

Rainer Kiko; Maike Kramer; Heike Wägele


Supplement to: Marquardt, M et al. (2011): Vertical distribution of sympagic meiofauna in sea ice in the Canadian Beaufort Sea. Polar Biology, 34(12), 1887-1900, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-011-1078-y | 2011

(Table 1) Snow and sea ice characteristics at stations sampled during a CCGS Amundsen cruise in 2008, eastern Beaufort Sea

Miriam Marquardt; Maike Kramer; Gauthier Carnat; Iris Werner


Supplement to: Kramer, M; Kiko, R (2011): Brackish meltponds on Arctic sea ice - a new habitat for marine metazoans. Polar Biology, 34(4), 603-608, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-010-0911-z | 2011

(Table 1) Sympagic meiofauna and amphipods inhabiting the meltponds in the Central Arctic sampled during POLARSTERN cruise ARK-XXII/2

Maike Kramer; Rainer Kiko


[Talk] In: IGS International Symposium on sea ice in the physical and biogeochemical system, 01.06.2010, Tromso, Norway . | 2010

Complexity of sea-ice food webs: the role of sympagic meiofauna

Maike Kramer; A. Schukat; U. Struck; Friederike Prowe; Rainer Kiko; Iris Werner


[Poster] In: Ocean Sciences Meeting 2010 "Oxygen Minimum Zones and Climate Change: Observations and Prediction IV", 22.02.-26.02.2010, Portland, Oregon, USA . | 2010

Colonisation of newly forming sea ice by meiofauna in the Central Arctic

Maike Kramer; Rainer Kiko; Stefan Kern; Henrike Mütze

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Rainer Kiko

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Marcel Nicolaus

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Klaus M. Meiners

Australian Antarctic Division

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Magnus Lucassen

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Sigrid B. Schnack-Schiel

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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