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Featured researches published by Nicole Patten.


Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom | 2006

Flow cytometric analysis of virus-like particles and heterotrophic bacteria within coral-associated reef water

Nicole Patten; Justin R. Seymour; James G. Mitchell

Using £ow cytometry, two distinct populations of virus-like particles (VLP) and heterotrophic bacteria were de¢ned within the 12 cm water layer immediately overlying healthy, diseased and dead acroporid corals. Bacterial abundances were similar in overlying water for all coral types, however, VLP were 30% higher above diseased corals than healthy or dead corals. Mean virus to bacteria ratios (VBR) were up to 30% higher above diseased corals than above healthy or dead coral or in distant water. Concomitant with increasing VLP concentrations within 5 cm of coral surfaces, VBR distributions were generally highest above healthy and diseased coral and depressed above dead coral. These results suggest fundamental shifts in the VLP and bacterial community in water associated with diseased corals.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

High-resolution fluorometer for mapping microscale phytoplankton distributions

Mark J. Doubell; Laurent Seuront; Justin R. Seymour; Nicole Patten; James G. Mitchell

ABSTRACT A new high-resolution, in situ profiling fluorometer maps fluorescence distributions with a spatial resolution of 0.5 to 1.5 mm to a depth of 70 m in the open ocean. We report centimeter-scale patterns for phytoplankton distributions associated with gradients exhibiting 10- to 30-fold changes in fluorescence in contrasting marine ecosystems.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Which environmental factors predict seasonal variation in the coral health of Acropora digitifera and Acropora spicifera at Ningaloo Reef

Saskia Hinrichs; Nicole Patten; Ming Feng; Daniel Strickland; Anya M. Waite

The impact of physico-chemical factors on percent coral cover and coral health was examined on a spatial basis for two dominant Acropora species, A. digitifera and A. spicifera, at Ningaloo Reef (north-western Australia) in the southeast Indian Ocean. Coral health was investigated by measuring metabolic indices (RNA/DNA ratio and protein concentration), energy levels (lipid ratio) and autotrophic indices (chlorophyll a (chl a) and zooxanthellae density) at six stations during typical seasons (austral autumn 2010 (March and April), austral winter 2010 (August)) and during an extreme La Niña event in summer 2011 (February). These indices were correlated with 15 physico-chemical factors (measured immediately following coral sampling) to identify predictors for health indices. Variations in metabolic indices (protein concentration and RNA/DNA ratio) for A. spicifera were mainly explained by nitrogen, temperature and zooplankton concentrations under typical conditions, while for A. digitifera, light as well as phytoplankton, in particular picoeukaryotes, were important, possibly due to higher energy requirement for lipid synthesis and storage in A. digitifera. Optimum metabolic values occurred for both Acropora species at 26–28°C when autotrophic indices (chl a and zooxanthellae density) were lowest. The extreme temperature during the La Niña event resulted in a shift of feeding modes, with an increased importance of water column plankton concentrations for metabolic rates of A. digitifera and light and plankton for A. spicifera. Our results suggest that impacts of high sea surface temperatures during extreme events such as La Niña may be mitigated via reduction on metabolic rates in coral host. The high water column plankton concentrations and associated low light levels resulted in a shift towards high symbiont densities, with lower metabolic rates and energy levels than the seasonal norm for the coral host.


Coral Reefs | 2013

Seasonal variations in energy levels and metabolic processes of two dominant Acropora species (A. spicifera and A. digitifera) at Ningaloo Reef

Saskia Hinrichs; Nicole Patten; Richard Allcock; Sam Saunders; Daniel Strickland; Anya M. Waite

Seasonal variations in coral health indices reflecting autotrophic activity (chlorophyll a and zooxanthellae density), metabolic rates (RNA/DNA ratio and protein) and energy storage (ratio of storage: structural lipids or lipid ratios) were examined for two dominant Acropora species [Acropora digitifera (AD) and Acropora spicifera (AS)] at Ningaloo Reef (north-western Australia). Such detailed investigation of metabolic processes is important background, with regard to understanding the vulnerability of corals to environmental change. Health indices in AD and AS were measured before and after spawning in austral autumn and winter 2010, and austral summer 2011 at six stations. Health indices showed seasonal and species-specific differences but negligible spatial differences across a reef section. For AD, autotrophic indices were negatively correlated with lipid ratios and metabolic indices. Metabolic indices were significantly higher in AS than AD. No correlation was observed between RNA/DNA ratios and lipid ratios with any autotrophic indices for AS. Lipid ratios were stable throughout the year for AS while they changed significantly for AD. For both species, indices of metabolic activity were highest during autumn, while autotrophic indices were highest in winter and summer. Results suggest that the impact of the broadcast spawning event on coral health indices at Ningaloo Reef occurred only as a backdrop to massive seasonal changes in coral physiology. The La Niña summer pattern resulted in high autotrophic indices and low metabolic indices and energy stores. Our results imply different metabolic processes in A. digitifera and A. spicifera as well as a strong impact of extreme events on coral physiology.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Temporal Variations in Metabolic and Autotrophic Indices for Acropora digitifera and Acropora spicifera – Implications for Monitoring Projects

Saskia Hinrichs; Nicole Patten; Anya M. Waite

Coral health indices are important components of the management assessments of coral reefs, providing insight into local variation in reef condition, as well as tools for comparisons between reefs and across various time scales. Understanding how such health indices vary in space and time is critical to their successful implementation as management tools. Here we compare autotrophic and heterotrophic coral health indices, examining specifically the temporal variation driven by the local environmental variation, at three scales (diel, daily and seasonal). We compared metabolic indices (RNA/DNA ratio, protein concentration) and autotrophic indices (Chlorophyll a (Chl a), zooxanthellae density, effective quantum yield (yield) and relative electron transport rate (rETR)) for two dominant Acropora species, A. digitifera and A. spicifera at Ningaloo Reef (north-western Australia) in August 2010 (austral winter) and February 2011 (austral summer). Clear seasonal patterns were documented for metabolic indices, zooxanthellae density and rETR, while cyclic diel patterns only occurred for yield and rETR, and RNA/DNA ratio. Significant daily variation was observed for RNA/DNA ratio, Chl a concentration, yield and rETR. Results suggest that zooxanthellae density and protein concentrations are good long-term indicators of coral health whose variance is largely seasonal, while RNA/DNA ratio and rETR can be used for both long-term (seasonal) and short-term (diel) coral monitoring. Chl a can be used to describe changes between days and yield for both diel and daily variations. Correlations between health indices and light history showed that short-term changes in irradiance had the strongest impact on all health indices except zooxanthellae density for A. digitifera; for A. spicifera no correlation was observed at all. However, cumulative irradiance over the several days before sampling showed significant correlations with most health indices suggesting that a time-lag effect has to be taken into account when interpreting diel variations in coral condition.


Scientific Data | 2018

Systematic, continental scale temporal monitoring of marine pelagic microbiota by the Australian Marine Microbial Biodiversity Initiative

Mark V. Brown; Jodie van de Kamp; Martin Ostrowski; Justin R. Seymour; Tim Ingleton; Lauren F. Messer; Thomas C. Jeffries; Nahshon Siboni; Bonnie Laverock; Jaume Bibiloni-Isaksson; Tiffanie M. Nelson; Frank Coman; Claire H. Davies; Dion M. F. Frampton; Mark Rayner; Kirianne Goossen; Stan S. Robert; Bronwyn H. Holmes; Guy C.J. Abell; Pascal Craw; Tim Kahlke; Swan Li San Sow; Kirsty McAllister; Jonathan Windsor; Michele Skuza; Ryan Crossing; Nicole Patten; Paul Malthouse; Paul van Ruth; Ian T. Paulsen

Sustained observations of microbial dynamics are rare, especially in southern hemisphere waters. The Australian Marine Microbial Biodiversity Initiative (AMMBI) provides methodologically standardized, continental scale, temporal phylogenetic amplicon sequencing data describing Bacteria, Archaea and microbial Eukarya assemblages. Sequence data is linked to extensive physical, biological and chemical oceanographic contextual information. Samples are collected monthly to seasonally from multiple depths at seven sites: Darwin Harbour (Northern Territory), Yongala (Queensland), North Stradbroke Island (Queensland), Port Hacking (New South Wales), Maria Island (Tasmania), Kangaroo Island (South Australia), Rottnest Island (Western Australia). These sites span ~30° of latitude and ~38° longitude, range from tropical to cold temperate zones, and are influenced by both local and globally significant oceanographic and climatic features. All sequence datasets are provided in both raw and processed fashion. Currently 952 samples are publically available for bacteria and archaea which include 88,951,761 bacterial (72,435 unique) and 70,463,079 archaeal (24,205 unique) 16 S rRNA v1-3 gene sequences, and 388 samples are available for eukaryotes which include 39,801,050 (78,463 unique) 18 S rRNA v4 gene sequences.


Scientific Data | 2018

A database of chlorophyll a in Australian waters

Claire H. Davies; Penelope Ajani; Linda H. Armbrecht; Natalia Atkins; Mark E. Baird; Jason M. Beard; Prudence Bonham; Michele Astrid Burford; Lesley Clementson; Peter Coad; C Crawford; Jocelyn Dela-Cruz; Martina A. Doblin; Steven Edgar; Ruth Eriksen; Jason D. Everett; Miles Furnas; Daniel P Harrison; Christel S. Hassler; Natasha Henschke; Xavier Hoenner; Timl Ingleton; Ian Jameson; John K. Keesing; Sophie C. Leterme; James McLaughlin; Margaret Miller; David Moffatt; Andrew Moss; S. Nayar

Chlorophyll a is the most commonly used indicator of phytoplankton biomass in the marine environment. It is relatively simple and cost effective to measure when compared to phytoplankton abundance and is thus routinely included in many surveys. Here we collate 173, 333 records of chlorophyll a collected since 1965 from Australian waters gathered from researchers on regular coastal monitoring surveys and ocean voyages into a single repository. This dataset includes the chlorophyll a values as measured from samples analysed using spectrophotometry, fluorometry and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The Australian Chlorophyll a database is freely available through the Australian Ocean Data Network portal (https://portal.aodn.org.au/). These data can be used in isolation as an index of phytoplankton biomass or in combination with other data to provide insight into water quality, ecosystem state, and relationships with other trophic levels such as zooplankton or fish.


Limnology and Oceanography | 2008

Biogeochemical responses to mass coral spawning at the Great Barrier Reef: Effects on respiration and primary production

Ronnie N. Glud; Bradley D. Eyre; Nicole Patten


Limnology and Oceanography | 2008

Mass coral spawning: A natural large‐scale nutrient addition experiment

Bradley D. Eyre; Ronnie N. Glud; Nicole Patten


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2005

Spatial dynamics of virus-like particles and heterotrophic bacteria within a shallow coral reef system

Justin R. Seymour; Nicole Patten; David G. Bourne; James G. Mitchell

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Anya M. Waite

University of Western Australia

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Bradley D. Eyre

Southern Cross University

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Paul van Ruth

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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Saskia Hinrichs

University of Western Australia

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Ronnie N. Glud

University of Southern Denmark

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Ana Redondo Rodriguez

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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Claire H. Davies

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Daniel Strickland

University of Western Australia

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David G. Bourne

Australian Institute of Marine Science

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