Takumi Hasegawa's research while affiliated with Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology and other places

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Publications (1)


Locations of sea ice and water sampling sites off Vincennes Bay, Mawson Station, and Cape Darnley in East Antarctica. Gray, white, and black circles denote 2014, 2016, and 2017, respectively, and black squares denote 2018
Vertical profiles of salinity (a), potential temperature (b; θ, °C), and chlorophyll a (c; μg L⁻¹). The solid dark, dashed dark, solid grey, and dashed grey lines denote 2014, 2016, 2017, and 2018, respectively
Calculated percentage of melting sea ice (%) in 2015–2016 (upper), 2016–2017 (middle), and 2017–2018 (lower) at the ice-edge station (Stn. KC6) off Vincennes Bay, East Antarctica. The dashed line shows the sampling date in each year
Vertical distribution of ice-associated copepod nauplii (left side in each panel) and other pelagic copepod nauplii (right side) in the water column at the ice-edge station (Stn. KC6) off Vincennes Bay, East Antarctica, in 2014, 2016, 2017, and 2018
Vertical distribution of Stephos longipes and harpacticoid copepodites in the water column at the ice-edge station (Stn. KC6) off Vincennes Bay, East Antarctica, in 2014, 2016, 2017, and 2018. For S. longipes, the abundances are shown by developmental stage

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Copepod assemblages in the water column and drifting sea-ice floes in the ice-edge region in the Indian Ocean sector of the Southern Ocean during the austral summer
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April 2022

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Polar Biology

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Takumi Hasegawa

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The ice-associated copepods Stephos longipes, Paralabidocera antarctica, and Drescheriella glacialis are the dominant species inhabiting Antarctic sea ice. They influence the pelagic ecosystem after being released into the water column when the ice melts from spring to summer in the marginal ice zone (MIZ), although less is known about those in the off-shelf region. We investigated the occurrence of copepods in drifting sea-ice floes and the adjacent water column off Vincennes Bay in the Indian sector of the Southern Ocean in mid-summer (January) of 2014 and 2016–2018. Sea-ice samples from the ice-growth season (February–March) collected off Australia’s Mawson Station (2016, n = 1) and Cape Darnley (2018, n = 2) provide some comparison with the ice-melt season. In the ice floes off Vincennes Bay, S. longipes and harpacticoid nauplii were abundant, but also highly variable (2016: 2.2 ± 3.5 [× 10⁴ ind. m⁻³], n = 8; 2017: 1.1 ± 5.4, n = 11; 2018: 0.94 ± 1.81, n = 10). Copepod nauplii were very abundant at 0–5 m depths (maximum of 8.1 × 10² ind. m⁻³), but absent at depths below 35 m; this implies that copepods disappear rapidly from the surface layer after being released, mainly due to predation/non-predation death or development from the nauplius to the copepodite stages. Overall, the results indicate that sea ice forming in shelf regions transports some of the ice-associated copepods further north, which supplies food to pelagic predators, although S. longipes is also a primary consumer in the MIZ.

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Citations (1)


... Others, such as members of Tisbintra and Tisbella are commonly found in surface plankton samples or mangrove ecosystems (Willey 1930;Sewell 1940;Ummerkutty 1961;Volkmann 1979a;Gómez and Fuentes-Reines 2017; Fuentes-Reinés and Suárez Morales 2019) and coastal marine (Coull 1970;Coull and Herman 1970;Fleeger and Shirley 1990;Franz and Friedman 2002) and brackish water habitats (Gurney 1927;Wilson 1932;Yeatman 1963Yeatman , 1983Reid and Hribar 2006;Morales-Serna and Gómez 2008). An increasing volume of literature has demonstrated that members of Drescheriella are sympagic (seaice inhabiting) and are often associated with microalgae colonizing the cracks in the sea ice (e.g., Giesbrecht 1902;Dahms and Dieckmann 1987;Dahms et al. 1990;Dahms and Schminke 1992;Schnack-Schiel et al. 1998, 2001aSwadling et al. 2000;Kiko et al. 2008;Loots et al. 2009;Kramer et al. 2011;Wallis et al. 2016;Makabe et al. 2022). ...

Reference:

A new genus and species of oceanic planktonic Tisbidae (Crustacea, Copepoda, Harpacticoida) with enlarged modified eyes
Copepod assemblages in the water column and drifting sea-ice floes in the ice-edge region in the Indian Ocean sector of the Southern Ocean during the austral summer

Polar Biology