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Dive into the research topics where Malin Daase is active.

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Featured researches published by Malin Daase.


Current Biology | 2015

Unexpected Levels of Biological Activity during the Polar Night Offer New Perspectives on a Warming Arctic

Jørgen Berge; Malin Daase; Paul E. Renaud; William G. Ambrose; Gérald Darnis; Eva Leu; Jonathan H. Cohen; Geir Johnsen; Mark A. Moline; Finlo Cottier; Øystein Varpe; Natalia Shunatova; Piotr Balazy; Nathalie Morata; Jean-Charles Massabuau; Stig Falk-Petersen; Ksenia Kosobokova; Clara Jule Marie Hoppe; Jan Marcin Węsławski; Piotr Kuklinski; Joanna Legeżyńska; Daria Nikishina; Marine Cusa; Monika Kędra; Maria Włodarska-Kowalczuk; Daniel Vogedes; Lionel Camus; Damien Tran; Emma Michaud; Tove M. Gabrielsen

The current understanding of Arctic ecosystems is deeply rooted in the classical view of a bottom-up controlled system with strong physical forcing and seasonality in primary-production regimes. Consequently, the Arctic polar night is commonly disregarded as a time of year when biological activities are reduced to a minimum due to a reduced food supply. Here, based upon a multidisciplinary ecosystem-scale study from the polar night at 79°N, we present an entirely different view. Instead of an ecosystem that has entered a resting state, we document a system with high activity levels and biological interactions across most trophic levels. In some habitats, biological diversity and presence of juvenile stages were elevated in winter months compared to the more productive and sunlit periods. Ultimately, our results suggest a different perspective regarding ecosystem function that will be of importance for future environmental management and decision making, especially at a time when Arctic regions are experiencing accelerated environmental change [1].


PLOS ONE | 2013

Floating ice-algal aggregates below melting arctic sea ice.

Philipp Assmy; Jens K. Ehn; Mar Fernández-Méndez; Haakon Hop; Christian Katlein; Arild Sundfjord; Katrin Bluhm; Malin Daase; Anja Engel; Agneta Fransson; Mats A. Granskog; Stephen R. Hudson; Svein Kristiansen; Marcel Nicolaus; Ilka Peeken; Angelika Renner; Gunnar Spreen; Agnieszka Tatarek; Józef Wiktor

During two consecutive cruises to the Eastern Central Arctic in late summer 2012, we observed floating algal aggregates in the melt-water layer below and between melting ice floes of first-year pack ice. The macroscopic (1-15 cm in diameter) aggregates had a mucous consistency and were dominated by typical ice-associated pennate diatoms embedded within the mucous matrix. Aggregates maintained buoyancy and accumulated just above a strong pycnocline that separated meltwater and seawater layers. We were able, for the first time, to obtain quantitative abundance and biomass estimates of these aggregates. Although their biomass and production on a square metre basis was small compared to ice-algal blooms, the floating ice-algal aggregates supported high levels of biological activity on the scale of the individual aggregate. In addition they constituted a food source for the ice-associated fauna as revealed by pigments indicative of zooplankton grazing, high abundance of naked ciliates, and ice amphipods associated with them. During the Arctic melt season, these floating aggregates likely play an important ecological role in an otherwise impoverished near-surface sea ice environment. Our findings provide important observations and measurements of a unique aggregate-based habitat during the 2012 record sea ice minimum year.


Marine Biology Research | 2008

Vertical distribution of Calanus spp. and Metridia longa at four Arctic locations

Malin Daase; Ketil Eiane; Dag L. Aksnes; Daniel Vogedes

Abstract We investigated the vertical distribution of Calanus finmarchicus, C. glacialis, C. hyperboreus and Metridia longa at four locations around the archipelago of Svalbard in autumn. The older and larger copepodites of Calanus spp. were generally located deeper in the water column. Differences in vertical distribution between stations partly reflected a south–north gradient in developmental progress with higher abundance of older stages in the southern locations. The C. finmarchicus and M. longa observations were consistent with the hypothesis that the developmental stages distributed according to certain preferences for light intensity, and different optical properties at the four locations are likely to have affected the vertical distributions. Diel vertical migration was only observed for older developmental stages of M. longa while young stages of M. longa remained in deep waters both day and night. A mortality index indicated that non-migrating Calanus spp. suffered higher mortality than migrating M. longa.


Biology Letters | 2012

Retention of ice-associated amphipods: possible consequences for an ice-free Arctic Ocean

Jørgen Berge; Øystein Varpe; Mark A. Moline; Anette Wold; Paul E. Renaud; Malin Daase; Stig Falk-Petersen

Recent studies predict that the Arctic Ocean will have ice-free summers within the next 30 years. This poses a significant challenge for the marine organisms associated with the Arctic sea ice, such as marine mammals and, not least, the ice-associated crustaceans generally considered to spend their entire life on the underside of the Arctic sea ice. Based upon unique samples collected within the Arctic Ocean during the polar night, we provide a new conceptual understanding of an intimate connection between these under-ice crustaceans and the deep Arctic Ocean currents. We suggest that downwards vertical migrations, followed by polewards transport in deep ocean currents, are an adaptive trait of ice fauna that both increases survival during ice-free periods of the year and enables re-colonization of sea ice when they ascend within the Arctic Ocean. From an evolutionary perspective, this may have been an adaptation allowing success in a seasonally ice-covered Arctic. Our findings may ultimately change the perception of ice fauna as a biota imminently threatened by the predicted disappearance of perennial sea ice.


Biology Letters | 2017

Genetics redraws pelagic biogeography of Calanus

Marvin Raoul Charles Roger Ren Choquet; Maja Haltebakk; Anusha K. S. Dhanasiri; Ksenia Kosobokova; Irina Smolina; Janne E. Søreide; Camilla Svensen; Webjørn Raunsgård Melle; Slawomir Kwasniewski; Ketil Eiane; Malin Daase; Vigdis Tverberg; Stig Skreslet; Ann Bucklin; Galice Hoarau

Planktonic copepods of the genus Calanus play a central role in North Atlantic/Arctic marine food webs. Here, using molecular markers, we redrew the distributional ranges of Calanus species inhabiting the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans and revealed much wider and more broadly overlapping distributions than previously described. The Arctic shelf species, C. glacialis, dominated the zooplankton assemblage of many Norwegian fjords, where only C. finmarchicus has been reported previously. In these fjords, high occurrences of the Arctic species C. hyperboreus were also found. Molecular markers revealed that the most common method of species identification, prosome length, cannot reliably discriminate the species in Norwegian fjords. Differences in degree of genetic differentiation among fjord populations of the two species suggested that C. glacialis is a more permanent resident of the fjords than C. finmarchicus. We found no evidence of hybridization between the species. Our results indicate a critical need for the wider use of molecular markers to reliably identify and discriminate these morphologically similar copepod species, which serve as important indicators of climate responses.


Science Advances | 2018

Use of an Autonomous Surface Vehicle reveals small-scale diel vertical migrations of zooplankton and susceptibility to light pollution under low solar irradiance

Martin Ludvigsen; Jørgen Berge; Maxime Geoffroy; Jonathan H. Cohen; Pedro R. De La Torre; Stein M. Nornes; Hanumant Singh; Asgeir J. Sørensen; Malin Daase; Geir Johnsen

Using new enabling technologies, we document behavioral patterns and susceptibility to light pollution never previously seen. Light is a major cue for nearly all life on Earth. However, most of our knowledge concerning the importance of light is based on organisms’ response to light during daytime, including the dusk and dawn phase. When it is dark, light is most often considered as pollution, with increasing appreciation of its negative ecological effects. Using an Autonomous Surface Vehicle fitted with a hyperspectral irradiance sensor and an acoustic profiler, we detected and quantified the behavior of zooplankton in an unpolluted light environment in the high Arctic polar night and compared the results with that from a light-polluted environment close to our research vessels. First, in environments free of light pollution, the zooplankton community is intimately connected to the ambient light regime and performs synchronized diel vertical migrations in the upper 30 m despite the sun never rising above the horizon. Second, the vast majority of the pelagic community exhibits a strong light-escape response in the presence of artificial light, observed down to 100 m. We conclude that artificial light from traditional sampling platforms affects the zooplankton community to a degree where it is impossible to examine its abundance and natural rhythms within the upper 100 m. This study underscores the need to adjust sampling platforms, particularly in dim-light conditions, to capture relevant physical and biological data for ecological studies. It also highlights a previously unchartered susceptibility to light pollution in a region destined to see significant changes in light climate due to a reduced ice cover and an increased anthropogenic activity.


Polar Biology | 2005

Dynamics of coexisting Calanus finmarchicus, Calanus glacialis and Calanus hyperboreus populations in a high-Arctic fjord

Gyda Arnkværn; Malin Daase; Ketil Eiane


Polar Biology | 2007

Mesozooplankton distribution in northern Svalbard waters in relation to hydrography

Malin Daase; Ketil Eiane


Progress in Oceanography | 2015

Selected physical, biological and biogeochemical implications of a rapidly changing Arctic Marginal Ice Zone

David G. Barber; Haakon Hop; Christopher John Mundy; Brent Else; Igor A. Dmitrenko; Jean-Éric Tremblay; Jens K. Ehn; Philipp Assmy; Malin Daase; L. M. Candlish; Søren Rysgaard


Biogeosciences | 2012

Mesozooplankton community development at elevated CO2 concentrations: results from a mesocosm experiment in an Arctic fjord

Barbara Niehoff; T. Schmithüsen; Nadine Knüppel; Malin Daase; Jan Czerny; Tim Boxhammer

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Jørgen Berge

University Centre in Svalbard

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Paul E. Renaud

University Centre in Svalbard

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Janne E. Søreide

University Centre in Svalbard

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Ketil Eiane

University Centre in Svalbard

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Øystein Varpe

University Centre in Svalbard

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Finlo Cottier

Scottish Association for Marine Science

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Eva Leu

Norwegian Polar Institute

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Geir Johnsen

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

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