OCCURRENCE DATASET

Distribution of surface phytoplankton between New Zealand and Antarctica, December 1957

Download

Abstract

During the Trans-Antarctic Expedition 1955-1958, the distribution of phytoplankton in the southern ocean and Ross Sea was investigated from fifty-seven samples taken at roughly 30-mile intervals between southern New Zealand and McMurdo Sound. The greatest diversity of species occurred between 55° and 60°S, just north of the Antarctic Convergence. Maximum concentration was found at 70° to 72°S, where Corethron crioplhilum was profoundly dominant. A predominately sub-Antarctic assemblage between 52° and 64°S was dominated by nine species not found in significant quantities elsewhere in the series of samples. Only two of these extended in appreciable numbers into the Ross Sea. Six of the commonest species ranged from sub-Antarctic waters southwards across the Antarctic Convergence, and two were not recorded north of the Ross Sea.


666 occurrence records



Keywords

Thesaurus
Keywords
Observation

Thesaurus
Keywords
Occurrence

Contributors

Kevin Mackay

creator metadataProvider contact 
kevin.mackay(a)niwa.co.nz
NIWA

Vivienne Cassie

personnel (author) 


Project

Project title
Trans-Antarctic Expedition 1955-58

Citation

Mackay K (2016). Distribution of surface phytoplankton between New Zealand and Antarctica, December 1957. The National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA). Occurrence Dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/h7joce


Download Events

Link to download events