Researcher Kasia Zamelczyk and PhD Candidate Pär Jansson from CAGE
participated on the second leg of the RV Polarstern-expedition to the
deep- sea observatory Hausgarten. The observatory is a network of 21
stations at water depths ranging between 250 m and 5500 m in the Fram
Strait. RV Polarstern has revisited the observatory annually for the
past 17 years, collecting long-term ecological data sampled by different
instruments throughout the network.
“Our main purpose was to install a methane sensor and a CTD instrument
(used to measure the conductivity, temperature, and physical properties
of the ocean) on the deep lander platform in central Hausgarten says
Zamelczyk.
Scientists expect to obtain a time series record of bottom water
properties such as temperature, salinity and pressure as well as methane
concentrations. The instruments were deployed at a water depth of 2500
meters, where no direct methane emission is expected. The data acquired
at this location will mainly serve as a reference to compare with other
sensors placed in active emission sites. Methane is a potent greenhouse
gas that is naturally seeping from the ocean floor.
This work was conducted within the FixO3 project, which seeks to integrate European open ocean fixed-point observatories.
Additional sampling offshore Svalbard
In addition Zamelczyk and Jansson collected CTD profiles and water
samples for methane concentration measurements at active methane seep
locations close to Prins Karls Forland, Svalbard.
“Water sampling will result in methane concentration profiles for 12
different depths. These profiles will help us to estimate the magnitude
of methane emissions and how high the methane can reach in the water
column. In total 48 bottles were collected in an area where we have seen
a lot of methane seeping from the seafloor” says Jansson.
Also, zooplankton net and surface sediment samples were collected at the
same locations. These samples will be used to study the impact of
methane release from the ocean floor on shells of planktonic (living in
the water column) and benthic foraminifera (living at the ocean floor).
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