Norsk

Sea-ice ridge formation fuels Arctic pelagic food webs during the polar night

Communications Earth & Environment ()

https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-026-03486-z

Research article

Open access (gold)

licensed under CC BY

1 Akvaplan-niva (current employee)

Authors (20)
  1. Lasse Mork Olsen
  2. Evgenii Salganik
  3. Oliver Müller
  4. Luisa von Albedyll
  5. Philipp Kurt Wolf Assmy
  6. Mats Granskog
  7. Clara J. M. Hoppe
  8. Robert G. Campbell
  9. Aud Larsen
  10. Eva Susanne Leu
  11. Rolf Rudolf Gradinger
  12. Jessie Gardner
  13. Nicole Aberle-Malzahn
  14. Dmitry Divine
  15. Knut Vilhelm Høyland
  16. Christian Katlein
  17. Benjamin Allen Lange
  18. Agnieszka Tatarek
  19. Jozef Wiktor
  20. Gunnar Bratbak

Abstract

There is no light for photosynthesis by phytoplankton and sea-ice algae during the polar night, but microbial grazers remain active through the dark winter months in the Arctic Ocean. Where the energy to sustain these organisms comes from is unknown. Here we observed active tintinnid ciliates during the polar night, heterotrophic protists known to feed on phytoplankton and smaller heterotrophic protists. Our calculations indicate that the pelagic microbial loop transferring energy from bacterial production through microbial grazers was not sufficient to sustain the observed tintinnid biomass. However, the sea ice contained frozen-in particulate organic carbon produced during the previous growth seasons. We show that enough food particles can be released by mechanical break-up during sea-ice ridging, which together with bacterial production, sustained the observed tintinnid biomass in the water column. This is an important but overlooked mechanism for winter survival of plankton in the Arctic Ocean.

Projects
  • Ridges - Safe Havens for ice-associated Flora and Fauna in a Seasonally ice-covered Arctic Ocean (HAVOC)
  • iC3: Centre for Ice, Cryosphere, Carbon and Climate
  • CAATEX: Coordinated Arctic Acoustic Thermometry Experiment
  • air-snow-ice-ocean INTERactions transforming Atlantic Arctic Climate (INTERAAC)
  • Created , modified