From Australian Oceans Data Network

UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) results

Created 13/03/2025

Updated 13/03/2025

Minicosm design: Three successive experiments to a maximum incubation of 14 days were performed from mid November to early January in the summer of 2002/03 in a temperature controlled shipping container housing six 500 L polythene tanks or minicosms. Domes of UV transmissive PMMA in the roof of the container directly above the minicosms allowed ambient sunlight to be reflected to the tanks through tubes of anodised aluminium. These tubes reflected greater than 96% of the incident radiation irrespective of wavelength. Light perturbation to each minicosm was achieved by screening materials that attenuated UV wavelengths. UV stabilised polycarbonate removed wavelengths shorter than 400 nm, transmitting only photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and provided the control treatment (PAR). In minicosm 2, a mylar screen removed UVB wavelengths (280 - 320 nm), providing a treatment (UVA) with PAR and UVA. Minicosms 3, 4 and 5 (UVB1, 2 and 3 respectively) were screened by borosilicate glass of 9, 5, and 3 mm thickness, transmitting ambient light (including UVR) at the equivalent water depths (ED, k=0.4) of 7.15, 5.38 and 4.97 meters respectively. Minicosm 6 (UVB4) was screened with PMMA that transmitted ambient light at an ED of 4.43 m. Light measurements: Measurements of downwelling UV and PAR were obtained using biometer and Licor sensors mounted on the roof of the minicosm container. A Macam, double grating spectroradiometer measured the spectral irradiance on the roof of the container. This was then weighted with the erythemal action spectrum and correlated to that obtained by the UV biometer. The Macam was used to measure the spectral irradiance at the cross of the UV biometer. The spectral intensity of light wavelengths were measured laterally and vertically in the minicosm screened only by UV-transmissive PMMA irradiance. These measurements were used to model the light field within the minicosm. In all other light treatments the Macam measured the spectral irradiance immediately below the water surface and in the centre of the minicosm. The model was then used to predict the spectral distribution and intensity of other light treatments. These measurements were repeated at interval throughout the season to determine whether solar elevation influenced transmission of ambient downwelling irradiance to the minicosms. UV and PAR sensors fixed to the outside of the minicosm container, together with the modelled light climates within each minicosm beneath each light treatment, predicted the quantify the light to which each experimental treatment was exposed. This work was conducted as part of ASAC project 2210. The download file contains three excel spreadsheets, plus three accompanying word documents which provide detailed methods used in the collection of these data, plus more information about the experiments. The fields in this dataset are: Day Treatment UVA UVB PAR - photosynthetically active radiation

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Field Value
Title UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) results
Language eng
Licence notspecified
Landing Page https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/9bc64019-89d3-4273-97be-ca0e82d9f981
Contact Point
CSIRO Oceans & Atmosphere
metadata@aad.gov.au
Reference Period 15/11/2002 - 08/01/2003
Geospatial Coverage {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[77.9, -68.6], [78.0, -68.6], [78.0, -68.5], [77.9, -68.5], [77.9, -68.6]]]}
Data Portal data.gov.au

Data Source

This dataset was originally found on data.gov.au "UV climate over the Southern Ocean south of Australia, and its biological impact - Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) results". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/uv-climate-over-the-southern-ocean-south-of-australia-and-its-biological-impact-dissolved-organ1

No duplicate datasets found.