Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Nicola Wannicke is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Nicola Wannicke.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2014

Climate change and regulation of hepatotoxin production in Cyanobacteria

Michelle M. Gehringer; Nicola Wannicke

Harmful, bloom-forming cyanobacteria (CyanoHABs) are occurring with increasing regularity in freshwater and marine ecosystems. The most commonly occurring cyanobacterial toxins are the hepatotoxic microcystin and nodularin. These cyclic hepta- and pentapeptides are synthesised nonribosomally by the gene products of the toxin gene clusters mcy and nda, respectively. Understanding of the regulation of hepatotoxin production is incomplete, although there is strong evidence supporting the roles of iron, light, higher nitrate availability and inorganic carbon in modulating microcystin levels. The majority of these studies have focused on the unicellular freshwater, microcystin-producing strain of Microcystis aeruginosa, with little attention being paid to terrestrial or marine toxin producers. This review intends to investigate the regulation of microcystin and nodularin production in unicellular and filamentous diazotrophic cyanobacteria against the background of changing climate conditions. Special focus is given to diazotrophic filamentous cyanobacteria, for example Nodularia spumigena, capable of regulating their nitrogen levels by actively fixing dinitrogen. By combining data from significant studies, an overall scheme of the regulation of toxin production is presented, focussing specifically on nodularin production in diazotrophs against the background of increasing carbon dioxide concentrations and temperatures envisaged under current climate change models. Furthermore, the risk of sustaining and spreading CyanoHABs in the future ocean is evaluated.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2017

Influence of Ocean Acidification and Deep Water Upwelling on Oligotrophic Plankton Communities in the Subtropical North Atlantic: Insights from an In situ Mesocosm Study

Jan Taucher; Lennart T. Bach; Tim Boxhammer; Alice Nauendorf; Eric P. Achterberg; María Algueró-Muñiz; Javier Arístegui; Jan Czerny; Mario Esposito; Wanchun Guan; Mathias Haunost; Henriette G. Horn; Andrea Ludwig; Jana Meyer; Carsten Spisla; Michael Sswat; Paul Stange; Ulf Riebesell; Nicole Aberle-Malzahn; Steve Archer; Maarten Boersma; Nadine Broda; Jan Büdenbender; Catriona Clemmesen; Mario Deckelnick; Thorsten Dittmar; Maria Dolores-Gelado; Isabel Dörner; Igor Fernández-Urruzola; Marika Fiedler

Oceanic uptake of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) causes pronounced shifts in marine carbonate chemistry and a decrease in seawater pH. Increasing evidence indicates that these changes—summarized by the term ocean acidification (OA)—can significantly affect marine food webs and biogeochemical cycles. However, current scientific knowledge is largely based on laboratory experiments with single species and artificial boundary conditions, whereas studies of natural plankton communities are still relatively rare. Moreover, the few existing community-level studies were mostly conducted in rather eutrophic environments, while less attention has been paid to oligotrophic systems such as the subtropical ocean gyres. Here we report from a recent in situ mesocosm experiment off the coast of Gran Canaria in the eastern subtropical North Atlantic, where we investigated the influence of OA on the ecology and biogeochemistry of plankton communities in oligotrophic waters under close-to-natural conditions. This paper is the first in this Research Topic of Frontiers in Marine Biogeochemistry and provides (1) a detailed overview of the experimental design and important events during our mesocosm campaign, and (2) first insights into the ecological responses of plankton communities to simulated OA over the course of the 62-day experiment. One particular scientific objective of our mesocosm experiment was to investigate how OA impacts might differ between oligotrophic conditions and phases of high biological productivity, which regularly occur in response to upwelling of nutrient-rich deep water in the study region. Therefore, we specifically developed a deep water collection system that allowed us to obtain ~85 m3 of seawater from ~650 m depth. Thereby, we replaced ~20% of each mesocosms volume with deep water and successfully simulated a deep water upwelling event that induced a pronounced plankton bloom. Our study revealed significant effects of OA on the entire food web, leading to a restructuring of plankton communities that emerged during the oligotrophic phase, and was further amplified during the bloom that developed in response to deep water addition. Such CO2-related shifts in plankton community composition could have consequences for ecosystem productivity, biomass transfer to higher trophic levels, and biogeochemical element cycling of oligotrophic ocean regions.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2018

New Perspectives on Nitrogen Fixation Measurements Using 15N2 Gas

Nicola Wannicke; Mar Benavides; Tage Dalsgaard; Joachim W. Dippner; Joseph P. Montoya; Maren Voss

Recently, the method widely used to determine 15N2 fixation rates in marine and freshwater environments was found to underestimate rates because the dissolution of the added 15N2 gas bubble in seawater takes longer than theoretically calculated. As a solution to the potential underestimate of rate measurements, the usage of the enriched water method was proposed to provide constant 15N2 enrichment. Still, the superiority of enriched water method over the previously used bubble injection remains inconclusive. To clarify this issue, we performed laboratory based experiments and implemented the results into an error analysis of 15N2 fixation rates. Moreover, we conducted a literature search on the comparison of the two methods to calculate a mean effect size using a meta-analysis approach. Our results indicate that the error potentially introduced by an equilibrium phase of the 15N2 gas is -72% at maximum for experiments with very short incubation times of 1 hour. In contrast, the underestimation was negligible for incubations lasting 12 to 24 hours (error is -0.2%). Our meta-analysis indicates that 84 % of the measurements in the two groups will overlap and there is a 61% chance that a sample picked at random from the enriched water group will have a higher value than one picked at random from the bubble group. Overall, the underestimation of N2 fixation rates when using the bubble method relative to the enriched water method is highly dependent on incubation time and other experimental conditions and cannot be generalized.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2015

Measuring bacterial activity and community composition at high hydrostatic pressure using a novel experimental approach: a pilot study

Nicola Wannicke; Katharina Frindte; Giselher Gust; Iris Liskow; Alexander Wacker; Andreas Bernhard Meyer; Hans-Peter Grossart

In this pilot study, we describe a high-pressure incubation system allowing multiple subsampling of a pressurized culture without decompression. The system was tested using one piezophilic (Photobacterium profundum), one piezotolerant (Colwellia maris) bacterial strain and a decompressed sample from the Mediterranean deep sea (3044 m) determining bacterial community composition, protein production (BPP) and cell multiplication rates (BCM) up to 27 MPa. The results showed elevation of BPP at high pressure was by a factor of 1.5 ± 1.4 and 3.9 ± 2.3 for P. profundum and C. maris, respectively, compared to ambient-pressure treatments and by a factor of 6.9 ± 3.8 fold in the field samples. In P. profundum and C. maris, BCM at high pressure was elevated (3.1 ± 1.5 and 2.9 ± 1.7 fold, respectively) compared to the ambient-pressure treatments. After 3 days of incubation at 27 MPa, the natural bacterial deep-sea community was dominated by one phylum of the genus Exiguobacterium, indicating the rapid selection of piezotolerant bacteria. In future studies, our novel incubation system could be part of an isopiestic pressure chain, allowing more accurate measurement of bacterial activity rates which is important both for modeling and for predicting the efficiency of the oceanic carbon pump.


Biogeosciences | 2012

Response of Nodularia spumigena to pCO2 – Part 1: Growth, production and nitrogen cycling

Nicola Wannicke; Sonja Endres; Anja Engel; Hans-Peter Grossart; Monika Nausch; J. Unger; Maren Voss


Biogeosciences | 2012

Response of Nodularia spumigena to pCO2 - Part 2: Exudation and extracellular enzyme activities

Sonja Endres; J. Unger; Nicola Wannicke; Monika Nausch; Maren Voss; Anja Engel


Biogeosciences | 2012

Response of Nodularia spumigena to pCO2 - Part 3: Turnover of phosphorus compounds

J. Unger; Sonja Endres; Nicola Wannicke; Anja Engel; Maren Voss; Günther Nausch; Monika Nausch


Supplement to: Endres, S et al. (2013): Response of Nodularia spumigena to pCO2; Part 2: Exudation and extracellular enzyme activities. Biogeosciences, 10(1), 567-582, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-10-567-2013 | 2014

Response of Nodularia spumigena to pCO2

Sonja Endres; J. Unger; Nicola Wannicke; Monika Nausch; Maren Voß; Anja Engel


Global Change Biology | 2018

The response of the marine nitrogen cycle to ocean acidification

Nicola Wannicke; Claudia Frey; Cliff S. Law; Maren Voss


Archive | 2015

using a novel experimental approach: A pilot study

Nicola Wannicke; Katharina Frindte; Giselher Gust; Iris Liskow; Alexander; Andreas Meyer; Hans-Peter Grossart; Alte Fischerhuette; Andreas Bernhard Meyer

Collaboration


Dive into the Nicola Wannicke's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Unger

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sonja Endres

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maren Voss

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Monika Nausch

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anja Engel

Marine Sciences Research Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Iris Liskow

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giselher Gust

Hamburg University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Günther Nausch

Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge