* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Swedish Marine Sciences Conference
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Swedish Marine Sciences Conference Umeå, 10-12 November 2014 © Katarina Stenman SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES 1 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Contents Organization and sponsors 3 Program 4 Keynote speakers 7 Dyrssen award 11 Oral presentations 12 Poster presentations 39 Conference dinner at Guitars – The Museum 54 List of participants 55 2 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Organization & sponsors The Marine Sciences Conference 2014 was organized by: Svenska Havsforskningsföreningen (SHF) Jenny Ask Sofie Backman Hanna Berggren Amund Lindberg Kristina Viklund The conference was kindly sponsored by: SMHI – Swedish Meterological and Hydrological Institute HAV – Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management Umeå University Umeå Marine Sciences Centre Department of Chemistry at Umeå University Department of Ecology and Environmental Science at Umeå University 3 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Program Monday 10 November 10.30 Registration and coffee 12.20 Welcome! Opening of conference 12.30 Jeffrey A. Hutchings, keynote presentation: Ecological and evolutionary consequences of over-exploitation in marine fishes 13.15 Pär Byström: Reciprocal intraguild predation interactions in juvenile predators and prey: effects of temporal separation on recruitment patterns 13.35 Anders Forsman: To what extent can existing research help forecast climate change impacts on biodiversity? 13.55 Agneta Andersson: Ecosystem effects in the Baltic Sea at future climate change projections implications for ecosystem management. 14.15-15.00 Coffee break 15.00 Johnny Berglund: Underwater maps for marine spatial planning and management 15.20 Johanna Bergkvist: Direct quantification of nutrient uptake in chain-forming diatoms during a spring-bloom in the Baltic Sea 15.40 Siv Huseby: The key role of phosphorus and nitrogen for cyanobacterial composition in the northern Baltic Sea 16.00 Malin Olofsson: Effects of phosphorous limitation on nitrogen and carbon fluxes in two strains of the cyanobacterium Nodularia spumigena 16.20 Agnes Karlson: High reproductive success and larger trophic niche in amphipods exposed to cyanobacterial blooms 16.40-19.00 Ice-breaker and poster presentations Tuesday 11 November 09.00 Katrine Borgå, keynote presentation: Diverging findings on siloxane biomagnification in aquatic food webs? 09.45 Anteneh Assefa: What can we learn from dynamics of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans in Baltic Sea sediments? 10.05 Terry Bidleman: Air-water exchange of natural brominated compounds in the northern Baltic Sea: Current status and possible influences of climate change 10.25-11.00 Coffee 4 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES 11.00 Daniela Figueroa: Allochthonous organic matter - a major driver of bacterial production in sub-arctic estuaries in the Baltic Sea 11.20 Markus Lindh: Baltic Sea transplant experiments uncover distinct water mass-dependent responses in bacterioplankton community composition and activities to changes in salinity and dissolved organic matter 11.40 Joanna Paczowska: Humic substance and phosphorus shape the size – structure and pigment content of Baltic Sea phytoplankton 12.00-13.15 Lunch 13.15 Asbjørn Vøllestad, keynote presentation: Climate effects on fish migration: eel and salmon as examples 14.00 Petter Tibblin: Evolutionary divergence of adult body size and juvenile growth in sympatric subpopulations of a top predator in aquatic ecosystems 14.20 Per Larsson: Data storage tags reveal a year’s life of Baltic Sea pike (Esox lucius) 14.40 Stina Israelsson: Bacterial communities of various fish species are specific and different from their seawater environment 15.00-15.40 Coffee 15.40 Elin Almroth-Rosell: Modelling the oxygen dependent benthic phosphate fluxes in the Baltic Sea - A new approach 16.00 Erik Gustafsson: External alkalinity loads vs. internal generation - the influence of noneriverine alkalinity sources in the Baltic Sea 16.20 Ida-Maja Hasselöv: Seawater chemistry governs performance and influence potential negative environmental effects of seawater scrubbing 16.40-18.00 Poster Session and coffee 16.45-18.15 SHF Annual Meeting 19.00 Conference dinner at Guitars – The Museum Wednesday 12 November 09.00 Anja Engel, Keynote presentation: Pelagic ecosystems in a high CO2 world: Can we predict what the future may bring? 09.45 Carina Bunse: Ocean acidification causes a community wide bacterial pH stress response 10.05 Juan José Rodríguez Serrano: Effects of increased pCO2 and terrestrial organic matter on phytoplankton and bacterioplankton activity and community structure 10.25-11.00 Coffee 5 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES 11.00 Dyrssen Award presentations 11.10 Per-Arvid Berglund: Razorbill (Alca torda) breeding success decreases with laying date – potential for complementing sprat (Sprattus sprattus) stock assessments and ecosystem management in the Baltic Sea? 11.30 Natalia Barrientos: Southern Ocean paleoceanographic changes at the Eocene-Oligocene climate transition: a meridional deep-sea transect of the Kerguelen Plateau 11.50-12.00 End of conference 6 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Keynote speakers Professor Jeffrey A. Hutchings Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada Professor Hutchings has a broad scientific interest including life-history evolution, alternative reproductive strategies, salmon aquaculture, phenotypic plasticity, organismal responses to directional temperature change, conservation biology, and how to communicate science to the society. He is world-famous for his work regarding the evolution of fish life histories and the collapse, recovery and sustainable harvesting of marine fishes. He will give a presentation on the ecological and evolutionary consequences of the overexploitation of marine fishes. 7 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Professor Katrine Borgå Oslo University, Norway Professor Borgå is an ecotoxicologist with long experience in studying the mechanisms and processes of contaminant distribution and accumulation in Arctic marine, large lake and sub-tropical forest food webs. Her work includes the influence of biogeochemistry on the (re)distribution of contaminants (legacy and emerging) in the context of a changing climate, and other environmental stressors that ecosystems are exposed to. In her presentation she will talk about siloxanes, which are current-used high production volume chemicals, and the contradictory results regarding their biomagnification in aquatic food webs. 8 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Professor Asbjørn Vøllestad Oslo University, Norway Professor Vøllestad’s main research effort concerns the variation in life history evolution and population dynamics in fish. In order to understand the evolutionary and ecological processes that affect populations at different spatial and temporal scales, he has focused his research on individual traits that are very important for fitness such as growth, age at maturation, fecundity and egg size. He will present some of his extensive work regarding how fish migrations are influenced by factors related to climate change. 9 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Professor Dr. Anja Engel GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research, Kiel, Germany Professor Engel has an extensive research career within the field of organic matter cycling and how that is influenced by various environmental factors in the pelagic ocean. Her current research regards climate change and ocean acidification, and how the complex interrelationships between the marine carbon cycle and microorganisms will affect the future CO2 balance in the Arctic Ocean. She will present results from extensive experiments on how ocean acidification affects pelagic food webs. 10 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Dyrssen Award We proudly present this year’s Dyrssen Prize Winners! Masters category (30-60 credits), 10.000 SEK: Natalia Barrientos, Stockholm University, for her work on “Southern Ocean paleoceanographic changes at the Eocene-Oligocene climate transition: a meridional deep-sea transect of the Kerguelen Plateau” In close competition with Natalia, Isabella Lindstrøm Larsen (University of Gothenburg) and Caroline Bringensparr (Stockholm University) are both second-prize winners and will receive honorable mentions for their work. Candidate category (15 credits), 5.000 SEK: Per-Arvid Berglund, Stockholm University, for his work on “Razorbill (Alca torda) breeding success decreases with laying date – potential for complementing sprat (Sprattus sprattus) stock assessments and ecosystem management in the Baltic Sea?” About the Dyrssen Award The Swedish Society for Marine Sciences (SHF) manages and appoints an annual winner of the Dyrssen Prize. The prize is SEK 10 000 and is presented to the author of the best M.Sc. Thesis in the marine field. The award was initiated by the SHF in honor of David Dyrssen (1922 - 2011), emeritus professor of analytical chemistry at the University of Gothenburg. As one of the founding members of the Swedish Society for Marine Sciences, he spent his career being an active proponent for the promotion of trans-disciplinary research for the marine sciences. 11 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Oral presentations Keynote speaker Jeffrey A. Hutchings Ecological and evolutionary consequences of over-exploitation in marine fishes Historically unprecedented depletions of marine fishes in the 1980s and 1990s stimulated considerable research on the consequences of over-exploitation for population recovery. Some of this work addressed longstanding questions of fish population dynamics: (i) Does per capita population growth rate (r) always increase as abundance declines? (ii) Do teleost fishes possess greater intrinsic recovery abilities (as reflected by rmax) than other vertebrates? (iii) Does magnitude of population reduction influence the probability of recovery? (iv) If fish evolve in response to fishing, changing average fitness and thus rmax, are the population-dynamic consequences likely to be negative, positive, or neutral? Challenging some long-standing perceptions and beliefs, recent meta-analyses and empirically based model simulations on marine teleost fishes support theoretically based postulates that: (i) rmax does not differ from that of terrestrial mammals; (ii) high fecundity has no influence on recovery potential; (iii) Allee effects can be manifest in some depleted populations; and (iv) the effects of fisheries-induced evolution on recovery are unlikely to be similar across species. An emerging imperative is the need to more fully embrace and comprehensively examine the links that exist between fitness and per capita population growth, given that what happens at the level of the individual will have consequences for how populations respond to natural and anthropogenic environment change. 12 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Pär Byström, Jens Olsson, Ulf Bergström Reciprocal intraguild predation interactions in juvenile predators and prey: effects of temporal separation on recruitment patterns Intraguild predation interactions make fish communities prone to exhibit alternative stable community states with either piscivore or prey fish dominance. In the Baltic Sea local declines of coastal keystone piscivores like perch have been observed to coincide with high densities of sticklebacks. Mechanisms behind this shift between piscivore and stickleback dominance were studied both experimentally and in the field. Results showed that predation by sticklebacks has a strong negative effect on larval perch survival but that this effect rapidly decreases with increasing larval size, due to both gape limitations and digestion constraints in sticklebacks. If YOY perch escape predation from sticklebacks they may instead negatively affect stickleback recruitment via predation. Large variations in spatial and temporal patterns of stickleback migration into perch spawning sites were observed, potentially explanation observed dichotomous patterns of either high YOY perch or stickleback densities in coastal bays later in season. Whether or not coastal piscivore populations will decline in response to increasing densities of sticklebacks is suggested to be determined by the availability of spatio/temporal refuges in the form of spawning sites into which sticklebacks do not migrate or arrive late in season compared to the reproduction period of perch. 13 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Anders Forsman, Hanna Berggren, Mats Åström and Per Larsson To what extent can existing research help forecast climate change impacts on biodiversity? It is broadly accepted that continued global warming will pose a major threat on biodiversity in the 21 st century. But how reliable are current forecasts regarding consequences of future climate change? We review the methodological approaches in published studies of how life in marine and freshwater environments responds to temperature shifts. We analyse the distribution of observational field surveys versus experiments performed in the laboratory or under natural conditions in the wild, the type of response variables considered, the number of species investigated, and study duration. The observed patterns indicate that, due to limitations of study design, ecological and evolutionary responses to temperature change of individuals, populations, species, and ecosystems were in many cases difficult to establish, and causal mechanism(s) often remained ambiguous. We also discovered that the thermal challenge in experimental studies was much more severe than estimates of past and prognostications of future ocean warming, and that temperature manipulations tended to increase in magnitude in more recent studies. These findings point to the conclusion that the extent to which existing research can increase our understanding of how higher temperatures associated with climate change will affect life in aquatic environments is limited. 14 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Agneta Andersson, H.E. Markus Meier, Matyas Ripszam, Owen Rowe, Johan Wikner, Peter Haglund, Kari Eilola, Catherine Legrand, Daniela Figueroa, Joanna Paczkowska, Elin Lindehoff, Mats Tysklind, Ragnar Elmgren Ecosystem effects in the Baltic Sea at future climate change projections - implications for ecosystem management Future climate change is likely to have large effects on the Baltic Sea ecosystem. Simulations indicate that by 2100 the temperature will increase 2-4oC and the ice coverage decrease 50-80%. Precipitation may increase in the north, causing up to 22% increased land runoff and thus higher concentrations of humic substances in the coastal water. Salinity may decrease 2 units in large parts of the Baltic Sea. In the north, reduced ice-coverage will induce an earlier onset of the spring bloom, while brownification will decrease phytoplankton production. Bacterial production is predicted to be maintained and the ecosystem turn net-heterotrophic. The organisms might to a higher degree be exposed to organic pollutants via sorption to humic substances. In the south bottom-water anoxia may spread, causing sediments to release phosphorus, which may favor cyanobacterial blooms. Future management of the Baltic Sea environment must consider the effects of climate change on ecosystem dynamics and functions. 15 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Johnny Berglund, Carlos Paz Von Friesen Underwater maps for marine spatial planning and management There is an increasing need for comprehensive information on underwater habitats in shallow coastal areas. Maps of the underwater landscape are required for marine spatial planning and coastal zone management, for handling of exploitation permits and for marine conservation. A new HELCOM underwater biotope (HUB) classification system for the Baltic Sea was adopted in 2013. It shares with the EUNIS system a hierarchical structure where the upper levels describe the physical habitat (e.g. depth zone and seabed substratum) and the lower levels describe the biotope based on dominating vegetation and/or fauna. In two cross-border cooperation projects in the Quark area, northern Baltic Sea, we have gathered a wide range of environmental data and developed a common underwater map between Finland and Sweden. The map which is compatible with the HELCOM Underwater Biotopes/Habitats Classification System covers an area of 2180 km2 and contains 18 different biotopes. The distribution of the biotopes was modelled by Random Forest, in Sweden, and Maximum Likelihood, in Finland. We also show how the HUB maps can be used by managers and decision makers by assessing how different activities may influence the biotopes. 16 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Johanna Bergkvist, Isabell Klawonn, Martin Whitehouse, Helle Ploug Direct quantification of nutrient uptake in chain-forming diatoms during a spring-bloom in the Baltic Sea SIMS (Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry) is a technique by which it is possible to measure isotopic composition of single cells of known identity in a mixed population. Here we present direct quantification of carbon, nitrate, and ammonium fluxes in chain-forming diatoms during a spring bloom in the Baltic Sea. Skeletonema marinoi and of Chaetoceros sp. contributed by 8% and 42%, respectively, of total nitrate uptake within this mixed field population, which was dominated by Skeletonema marinoi with respect to cellular abundance. Incubation of the seawater in roller tanks showed a high aggregation potential and high ammonium production within diatom aggregates. The total nitrate assimilation by diatoms was 0.26 µg N L -1 h1 . The net ammonium release by diatom aggregates ranged between 0.070 and 0.21 µg N L -1 h-1. Hence, ammonium production during remineralization was probably an additional N-source to cover cellular Ndemand when nitrate was depleted. We conclude that diffusion limitation of nitrate uptake by chain-forming diatoms is likely of little significance during spring blooms, and that chain-formation probably is more significant as an adaptation to reduce grazing pressure. 17 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Siv Huseby, Agneta Andersson, Helena Höglander, Chatarina Karlsson The key role of phosphorus and nitrogen for cyanobacterial composition in the northern Baltic Sea Cyanobacteria are a frequently occurring and harmful algal group in the Baltic Sea. The composition of the cyanobacterial communities in different areas of the Baltic Sea and the environmental factors governing the structure of cyanobacterial community are however poorly understood. We studied the occurrence and temporal trends of the orders Nostocales, Chroococcales, and Oscillatoriales, at locations in the northern Baltic Sea, June – September, 1998-2012. The average contribution of cyanobacteria to the total phytoplankton biomass increased from 1 to 35% in the north-south gradient. In the offshore Bothnian Bay, Chroococcales and Oscillatoriales dominated the cyanobacterial community. In the Bothnian Sea and the northern Baltic Proper, Nostocales constituted >80% of the cyanobacterial biomass. Nostocales correlated positively with high phosphorus and high salinity, while Oscillatoriales is promoted by high nitrogen concentrations and low salinity and Chroococcales is coupled to low salinity and low phosphorus. Phosphorus seems to be a positive regulating factor of cyanobacteria in northern the Baltic Sea. Furthermore, this study indicates that Chroococcales might be used as indicator for increased nutrient levels in unproductive waters, while Nostocales could be used as water quality indicator in more productive waters with high phosphorus concentrations and low inorganic nitrogen concentrations. 18 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Malin Olofsson, Jenny Egardt, Arvind Singh, Helle Ploug Effects of phosphorous limitation on nitrogen and carbon fluxes in two strains of the cyanobacterium Nodularia spumigena In the Baltic Sea, the filamentous N2-fixing cyanobacteria, Nodularia spumigena, is important for the nitrogen cycling during summer blooms when inorganic phosphate often limits growth by cyanobacteria. By using stable isotope tracers we investigated, cellular growth, carbon- and N2-fixation rates under P-limitation and P-replete conditions in two strains (KAC12 and KAC64) of N. spumigena, during a 21 days experiment. KAC12 showed a steep increase of carbon- and N2-fixation already during the first week of the experiment, while KAC64 showed a slower but steady increase of fixation rates until the end of the experiment, as the inorganic nitrogen in the surrounding water was depleted. Phosphate limitation decreased average carbon-fixation rate significantly in both strains, but had no effect on N 2-fixation. The average N2-fixation by KAC12 was significantly higher than that by KAC64, when pooling the treatments. However, the C:N fixation ratio and the cellular C:N ratio were not affected by limitation of phosphate, and stayed fairly close to Redfield ratio (C:N = 6.6) for both strains towards the end of the experiment. The heterocyst frequency decreased significantly during 21 days at phosphate-limitation. The heterocyst frequency was not correlated to N 2-fixation rate. 19 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Agnes ML Karlson, Hedvig Hogfors, Brita Sundelin, Ulf Larsson, Susanna Hajdu, Jan Albertsson, Andrius Garbaras, Elena Gorokhova High reproductive success and larger trophic niche in amphipods exposed to cyanobacterial blooms Cyanobacterial blooms are often considered a visible sign of eutrophication with potential negative effects on biota. Evidence is accumulating, however, that filamentous toxin-producing cyanobacteria are eaten by many grazers, suspension-feeders and deposit-feeders, often with beneficial effects on growth and reproduction. Using long-term monitoring data and archival samples from different areas of the Baltic Sea, we tested a hypothesis that cyanobacterial blooms may improve trophic state and reproductive success in the depositfeeding amphipod Monoporeia affinis. We found that magnitude of the cyanobacterial bloom has positive effect on the trophic niche size in the amphipod populations. Moreover, there were positive linkages between the niche size and amphipod C:N ratio, indicating improved nutrition state, and further, between niche size and embryo viability in M. affinis populations. These findings suggest that cyanobacteria may support feeding and production in this ecologically important benthic species and call for a quantitative assessment of cyanobacteria contribution to benthic production at various ecological settings in the Baltic Sea. 20 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Keynote speaker Katrine Borgå Diverging findings on siloxane biomagnification in aquatic food webs Marine and freshwater ecosystems are recipients of legacy and emerging environmental contaminants originating from applications including agriculture, industry and from our own personal use. Siloxanes, such as cyclic volatile methyl siloxanes (cVMS) are current-used high production volume chemicals identified with physical chemical properties of concern. cVMS have been quantified in the Arctic environment, as well as in temperate marine and freshwater food webs. However, our present understanding of the environmental behavior of cVMS, in particular the food web accumulation is still poor and contradictory. Whereas several food web magnification studies show trophic dilution with food web biomagnification factors below 1.0, predator-prey specific biomagnification studies and food web studies from the large inland lakes in Norway show increasing concentrations with trophic level. I will discuss these contradictory results – how this affects the evaluation of the chemicals in a regulatory sense, and how we can improve the understanding of bioaccumulation of emerging contaminants in aquatic food webs. 21 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Anteneh Assefa, Anna Sobek , Karin Wiberg , Mats Tysklind What can we learn from dynamics of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans in Baltic Sea sediments? Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PCDDS) and dibenzofurans (PCDFs) (commonly known as dioxins) are groups of persistent organic pollutants that are unintentionally produced in a variety of industrial processes. Dioxins are known for their persistence, toxicity and worldwide spread. High levels of PCDD/Fs are observed in fatty fish and other seafood from the Baltic Sea, occasionally exceeding the maximum limit for food and feed assigned by the European Commission. Therefore, dioxins are of high concern in the Baltic Sea region. Based on a study on fifteen sediment cores collected from the Baltic Sea, which covered the period 1920s-2000s, the overall peak year in offshore areas was 1994 ± 5 years, and after peak the half-life in sediments was 29 ± 11 years (1). For industrial/urban impacted coastal sites, the temporal trend was more variable with peak years occurring 1−2 decades earlier compared to offshore areas. The substantial reductions from peak levels (38 ± 11% and 81 ± 12% in offshore and coastal areas, respectively) reflect domestic and international actions taken for reduction of the release of dioxins to the environment. Using a multivariate data analysis technique called positive matrix factorization, six historically important dioxin sources have been identified (2). These are (i) atmospheric background deposition (ABD), (ii) pentachlorophenol, (iii) tetra-chlorophenol, (iv) high temperature processes (Thermal), (v) hexachlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins related sources, and (vi) chlorinerelated sources. Overall, the combined impact of atmospheric-related emissions (ABD and Thermal) dominated the open sea system throughout the study period and showed a decreasing south to north trend (always >80% in the south and >50% in the north). The possible link between these sources and the contamination of Baltic biota will be addressed in an upcoming study. 22 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Terry F. Bidleman, Kathleen Agosta, Agneta Andersson, Peter Haglund, Olle Nygren, Matyas Ripszam, Mats Tysklind Air-Water Exchange of Natural Brominated Compounds in the Northern Baltic Sea: Current Status and Possible Influences of Climate Change Bromophenols (BPs) are produced by macroalgae and cyanobacteria in the Baltic Sea and marine environments worldwide. BPs are partly or fully dissociated at seawater pH, but undergo O-methylation to form bromoanisoles (BAs) which are more volatile and exchanged between water and air (1). Other bromophenolic compounds in Baltic biota include hydroxylated and methoxylated bromodiphenyl ethers (OHBDEs, MeO-BDEs) and polybrominated dibenzo-p-dioxins (PBDDs) (2,3). Although natural, these compounds have toxic properties (4,5) which may be of concern when viewed as part of the mixture with anthropogenic substances (2). Here we summarize investigations of sea-air-exchange of BAs in the Baltic (1) and report the first measurements of MeO-BDEs in Baltic water and air. We also discuss factors influencing the production of natural brominated compounds that are likely to be affected by climate change. Water from the Bothnian BaySea and one expedition in the Baltic Proper was filtered (GF/F) and 5-40 L was passed through columns of XAD2 or ENV+ resin to extract BAs and MeO-BDEs. Air samples of 50-150 m3 for BAs and 1300-2200 m3 for MeOBDEs were collected at the island Holmön (63.79N, 20.84E) on glass fibre filter-polyurethane foam (PUF) traps. Sample extracts were cleaned with Florisil and BAs were determined by capillary gas chromatography-electron impact mass spectrometry (GC-ECNI-MS) (1). Additional cleanup with 18 M sulphuric acid was done on combined extracts before MeO-BDEs were determined by GC-ECNI-MS. Bromine ions 79 and 81 were monitored. The most abundant BAs in water were 2,4,6-TriBA and 2,4-DiBA at concentrations ranging from 64637 and 20-205 pg L-1, while these BAs in air varied from 5.5-116 and 2.1-37 pg m-3. 2,6-DiBA was also identified in water and air at lower concentrations. 6-MeO-BDE47 and other MeO-BDEs were found at pg L-1 levels in water and fg m-3 levels in air. BAs in surface water were oversaturated relative to water/air equilibrium, resulting in net volatilisation of up to 1300 kg of total BAs from Bothnian Bay (38 000 km 2) between May and September (1). Physical impacts of climate change on the Baltic Sea include increasing water temperature and fresh water input, and reduction in ice cover and salinity (6). A shift is anticipated from a phytoplankton to microbial-based food web in the northern Baltic coupled to increasing river runoff (6), and phytoplankton production in the south is expected to increase under some scenarios of rising temperature and nutrient loadings (7). Greater discharge of fresh water and increase in brown-colored DOM in the northern Baltic may reduce bromide availability, phytoplankton production (6) and consequently BPs/BAs. On the other hand, volatile halocarbons are produced by reaction of hypobromite and seawater DOM, under bromoperoxidase catalysis (8). Is this also the case for bromophenolics, and if so, how will their production respond to opposing conditions of lower bromide and higher DOM? Better understanding of the biogeochemistry of halogenated natural products is required. 23 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Daniela Figueroa, Owen Rowe, Joanna Paczkowska, Agneta Andersson Allochthonous organic matter - a major driver of bacterial production in sub-arctic estuaries in the Baltic Sea In aquatic ecosystems the bacterial production frequently is positively correlated to primary production. This relation does however not hold true in systems highly influenced by terrestrial organic matter, like many unproductive humic lakes, where bacterial production is subsidized by external carbon and primary production hampered by poor light climate. We hypothesized that a similar condition would prevail in unproductive subarctic estuaries receiving high amounts of riverine material from land. Bacterial production and potentially explanatory factors were measured in the Råneå estuary in the northern Baltic Sea, at 19 stations during 4 months: May, June, July and August. Maximum bacterial production rates were observed in spring, concomitant to the spring river flush of allochthonous organic matter, and lowest rates were observed during summer when primary production peaked. On average, the bacterial production was 3-fold higher than primary production. The bioavailability of the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) was highest in spring close to the river mouth (~70%) and lowest during the summer (0-5%). The DOC was estimated to contribute to ~50% of the bacterial growth. Partial least square analysis showed that 68 % of the variation of bacterial production could be explained by allochthonuos organic carbon, which include humic substances, dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM). This study indicates that climate-induced increases in land run-off will promote bacterial production and reduce primary production in subarctic estuaries in the northern Baltic Sea. 24 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Markus V. Lindh, Daniela Figueroa, Johanna Sjöstedt, Daniel Lundin, Agneta Andersson, Catherine Legrand, Jarone Pinhassi Baltic Sea transplant experiments uncover distinct water mass-dependent responses in bacterioplankton community composition and activities to changes in salinity and dissolved organic matter Climate change-induced increase in precipitation is predicted to intensify river runoff, causing intensified loading of terrigenous organic matter and lower salinity in coastal waters. Although bacterioplankton are the principal degraders of dissolved organic matter, it remains largely unknown how particular bacterial populations and their ecosystem functioning will be affected by such environmental disturbance. We determined metabolic and compositional responses of bacteria in microcosm transplants and re-transplants between humic acid-impacted Bothnian Sea water (3.6 PSU) and Baltic Proper water (6.6 PSU). Baltic Proper bacteria transferred to Bothnian Sea water had significantly elevated bacterial production and betaglucosidase activity compared to other microcosms, indicating that terrigenous organic matter and lower salinity affected ecosystem process rates. Concomitantly, changes in community composition occurred between microcosms, primarily among Roseobacter clade vs. Pseudomonadaceae and Flavobacteriaceae populations. Baltic Proper bacteria transferred to Bothnian Sea water with continued incubation in Bothnian Sea water had elevated bacterial production and beta-glucosidase activity. Also re-transplanted Bothnian Sea bacteria showed elevated bacterial production and high leucine-aminopeptidase activity. In the former microcosms Burkholderiaceae OTUs was prevalent and in the latter microcosms Alteromonadaceae OTUs increased. Further, significant correlations between community composition and ecosystem process rates suggested a coupling between phylogeny, bacterioplankton response to environmental disturbances and ecosystem functioning. The water mass dependent response of communities show that increased river runoff may have an essential "priming" effect on bacterial community structure that could translate into longer-term changes in ecosystem functioning and bacterial carbon cycling properties toward a net heterotrophic Baltic Sea ecosystem. 25 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Joanna Paczkowska, Owen Rowe, Caterine Legrand, Bengt Karlsson, Agneta Andersson Humic substance and phosphorus shape the size – structure and pigment content of Baltic Sea phytoplankton The temporal and spatial variation of the size-structure and pigment content of the phytoplankton community were studied along a south – north gradient in the Baltic Sea. Samples were collected at fourteen stations, from Kattegat to the Bothnian Bay during a summer and a winter–spring cruise 2011-2012, respectively. We hypothesized that the phytoplankton size-structure and pigment content were shaped by the nutrient availability and concentrations of humic substances in the gradient. In summer the proportion of autotrophs decreased gradually from south to north, while the opposite trend was observed for mixotrophs. Picoplankton was the dominant size class in the Baltic Proper and Bothnian Sea (~70%), while their importance decreased gradually towards the north. Mixotrophic nanoplankton instead dominated in the Bothnian Bay, where the concentrations of humic substances were high. During the nutrient rich winter–spring period, microplankton (> 20 µm) dominated at all stations, constituting on average 60% of the biomass. Dinophyceae was the dominant phytoplankton group. The chlorophyll content of the phytoplankton (chlorophyll a: carbon biomass ratio) increased from north to south, indicating adaption to darker humic rich water in the north. The photoprotective pigments were 10-fold higher in the summer than in the winter. During the summer, the photoprotective index was higher in the southern Baltic Sea than in the north, indicating adaption to high lightclimate in the south. The results support that both nutrient concentrations and humic substances are important for the size-structure and composition of the phytoplankton community. 26 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Keynote speaker Asbjørn Vøllestad Climate effects on fish migration: eel and salmon as examples Most fishes migrate among habitats during some particular stages of their life cycle. Migrations may be shortor long distance, and the environmental cues triggering the migrations differ. Organisms at different levels in the food web may respond different phenotypically to climatic cues. This may lead to population level as well as ecosystem level effects (mismatch). In this talk I will discuss how various environmental factors, occurring at different spatial scales, may impact on fish migrations through plastic responses and/or evolutionary changes. I will use European eel and Atlantic salmon as examples, and discuss how climate change may impact on migration and population dynamics. 27 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Petter Tibblin, Anders Forsman, Per Koch-Schmidt, Peter Johannessen, Jonas Nilsson, Per Larsson Sympatric subpopulations of pike in the Baltic Sea – same but different? Evolutionary theory predicts that different selective regimes may contribute to divergent evolution of body size and growth rate among populations, but most previous studies have focused on allopatric populations. Here, we studied five sympatric subpopulations of anadromous Northern pike (Esox lucius) in the Baltic Sea subjected to different environments only for a few weeks during reproduction and the larval period due to natal homing. We report differences in adult body size among subpopulations that were due in part to variation in growth rate. Body size of emigrating juveniles also differed among subpopulations and differences remained when individuals were reared in a common environment. This indicates that the variation among subpopulations was genetically based and represented evolutionary modifications, possibly in response to differences in subpopulation density and intensity of intra-specific interactions during early life. Adult and juvenile size was negatively correlated across subpopulations, and reconstruction of growth trajectories of adult fishes suggest that body size differences developed gradually and became accentuated throughout the first years of life. These results represent rare evidence that coexisting subpopulations can evolve differences in key life history traits despite being subjected to different environments and selective regimes only during a very short fraction of their life. 28 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Per Larsson, Petter Tibblin Data storage tags reveal a year’s life of Baltic Sea pike (Esox lucius) Pike were marked with electronic tags and Data Storage Tags (DST) during 2012 in a small spawning stream entering the South West Baltic Sea. The fish (n=24) were caught by a fyke net after spawning (downstream migration) and the tags were put surgically in the bucal cavity. The pikes were sexed and the length was measures (>60 cm, all females) and the fishes were then released in the stream. The DST registered pressure (depth) every minute and temperature every 10 minutes. During spawning season the following year a fykenet was placed in the stream to catch fish on their upstream spawning migration. Fish that contained PIT and DST were sacrificed (n=9, 37% of the tagged fish) and the tags removed for analysis (DST). After the spawning season in May and June, pike showed a daily positive temperature pattern compared to surface temperature at a coastal station (VIVA). At night, fish showed high activity pattern (foraging) moving from surface to deeper habitats. The excursions were followed by day resting in surface water resulting in increasing body temperature. For some fish the pattern were regular and diurnal. In late summer the temperature pattern in pike changed and became negative. Activity (foraging) changed and included both surface and subsurface patterns. The patterns showed consistent individual behaviour. Under ice in winter (at 2-3 oC), fish had intense, short (<10 h) activity periods followed by long periods (<14 days) of subsurface rest. In April, the start of migration in the sea back to the spawning brook could be determined as a resting period followed by a continuous activity pattern until the fish were caught in the spawning area. 29 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Stina Israelsson, Hanna Berggren, Markus. V. Lindh, Daniel Lundin, Anna Schager, Catherine Legrand, Anders Forsman, Jarone Pinhassi Bacterial communities of various fish species are specific and different from their seawater environment The importance and specificity of microbiota in healthy fish are increasingly acknowledged. However, little is known about how microbiomes of various fish species relate to each other, within different body regions, and to the ambient seawater bacterial community composition. Bacterial composition in hindgut and epidermal mucus was determined using 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing in cod (n=6), herring (n=10), sprat (n=5) and sculpin (n=9) from the Baltic Proper and compared to bacterial community composition of seawater as determined over three years. In gut, microbial biodiversity was significantly lower compared to mucus and seawater, suggesting a harsher environment in gut. Bacterial composition in mucus was significantly different from that of seawater and fish species dependent. 43% of all OTUs (using 97% clustering level) found in fish were unique to fish and not found in seawater. Shared OTUs were also associated to either fish or seawater according to differences in relative abundance. Several OTUs showed fish species and body site specificity, indicating distinct core microbiomes of different fish. For example, two Desulfobulbus-assigned OTUs were sprat mucus-specific and absent form seawater. These findings suggest that interactions between fish and bacteria are highly specific and more complex than previously recognized. 30 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Elin Almroth- Rosell Modelling the oxygen dependent benthic phosphate fluxes in the Baltic Sea - A new approach The new approach to model the oxygen dependent phosphate release by implementing formulations of the oxygen penetration depths (OPD) and mineral bound inorganic phosphorus pools to the Swedish Coastal and Ocean Biogeochemical model (SCOBI) will be presented. The phosphorus dynamics and the oxygen concentrations in the Baltic proper sediment was studied during the period 1980-2008 using SCOBI coupled to the 3D-Rossby Centre Ocean model. The model data have been compared to observations from monitoring stations and experiments. The seasonal variation on the OPD is largest in the coastal zones, where also the impact from oxygen consumption on the determination of the OPD is found to be large. In the deep water the low oxygen concentrations mainly determine the OPD. Highest modelled release rate of phosphate from the sediment is about 59×103 t P year-1 and is found on anoxic sediment at depths between 60-150 m. The deposition of organic and inorganic phosphorus on sediments with oxic bottom water is larger than the release of phosphorus, about 43×103 t P year 1. For anoxic bottoms the release of total phosphorus during the investigated period is larger than the deposition, about 19×103 t P year 1. In total the net Baltic proper sediment sink is about 23.7×103 t P year 1. The estimated phosphorus sink efficiency of the entire Baltic Sea is on average about 83% during the period. 31 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Erik Gustafsson, Teresia Wällstedt, Christoph Humborg, Carl-Magnus Mörth, Bo G. Gustafsson External alkalinity loads vs. internal generation - the influence of none-riverine alkalinity sources in the Baltic Sea Simulations in BALTSEM, a coupled physical-biogeochemical Baltic Sea model, clearly show that river loads of alkalinity together with North Sea water inflows are not sufficient to reproduce observed alkalinity concentrations in the system, demonstrating the large influence from internal sources. Budget calculations indicate that the required internal alkalinity generation must be similar to river loads in magnitude. The majority of this internal source is most likely related to unresolved sediment processes such as burial of reduced sulfur and/or silicate weathering. Studies on sediment processes on a global scale together with data from sediment cores in the Baltic Sea support this hypothesis. Internal alkalinity generation in coastal oceans has the potential to increase ocean buffer capacity and thus enhance the uptake of atmospheric CO 2. This study illustrates how the internal alkalinity generation in the Baltic Sea results in a significant carbon sink, mitigating CO2 evasion from the system. 32 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Ida-Maja Hassellöv, Erik Ytreberg, Kent Salo Seawater chemistry governs performance and influence potential negative environmental effects of seawater scrubbing Shipping is today the largest individual polluting industry with respect to emissions of acidifying sulphur and nitrogen oxides. To reduce ship emissions of acidifying gases to the atmosphere, stricter sulphur regulations will apply from 2015. To cope with the new regulations ships will either have to switch to expensive low sulphur fuel, or use an alternate abatement method such as seawater scrubbing. Seawater scrubbing utilizes the natural high solubility of primarily sulphur oxides in seawater and the exhausts are scrubbed in a fine spray of seawater. The efficiency of the scrubbing process is governed by seawater chemistry, implying that the natural decrease in alkalinity from the Skagerrak to the Baltic Sea will lower the efficiency. Further, the resulting large volumes of acidified seawater (pH 3) also contain other washed out contaminants such as copper and zink. Chalmers’ model scrubber setup, coupled to a marine engine lab, allows for scrubbing of different types of seawater with simultaneous on-line gas analysis of the scrubbed exhausts. Here we present preliminary results of the efficiency of the scrubbing process using seawater from the Kattegat and the Baltic Proper. Initial assessment of ecotoxicological effects of the scrubber water will also be discussed. The overall aim is to use the data to deliver a scientifically based risk assessment on large scale use of seawater scrubbing in the seas surrounding Sweden. 33 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Keynote speaker Anja Engel Pelagic ecosystems in a high CO2 world: Can we predict what the future may bring? Pelagic ecosystems cover 70% of the Earth’s surface and play a major role in global primary productivity, oceanic CO2 uptake, climate regulation, as well as for fisheries, and human recreation and health. Directly interacting with the atmosphere, the ocean is the largest sink for anthropogenic CO 2. In consequence, surface seawater pH is declining at a rate unprecedented during the past 300 million years, a detection that we refer to as ocean acidification. Early studies on ocean acidification revealed strong and direct effects of changes in pH and pCO2 on the physiology of individual plankton species, and implied severe consequences for pelagic ecosystem services. Stimulated by the potential threads of a high CO 2 world, national and international research programs (e.g. EPOCA, BIOACID, UKOA, OAP) were launched to better understand the impacts of ocean acidification on marine organisms, ecosystems and biogeochemistry, and the potential feedbacks to climate. This talk will give a progress report of how ocean acidification and carbonation may change pelagic life in the surface ocean. Recent approaches to simulate a high CO2 environment will be shown, and mechanisms of potential feedbacks to climate will be discussed. 34 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Carina Bunse, Lovisa Svensson, Daniel Lundin, Federico Baltar, Neelam Akram, Mark Dopson, Karin Holmfeldt, Jeremy Forsberg, Christofer Karlsson, Joakim Palovaara, Maria Vila-Costa, Eva Calvo, Carles Pelejero, Cèlia Marrasé, José M González, Josep M Gasol, Jarone Pinhassi Ocean acidification causes a community wide bacterial pH stress response Anthropogenic CO2 emissions threaten the structure and function of marine food-webs by lowering oceanic pH. Despite their importance for biogeochemical cycling, physiological responses of bacterioplankton to ocean acidification remain largely unknown. We conducted a mesocosm experiment with Mediterranean seawater treated with CO2 or/and nutrient enrichment and analyzed microbial responses. While community composition remained stable, bacterial community-wide expression analysis revealed that genes involved in respiration, photosynthesis and proton transport, e.g. proteorhodopsin, were significantly enriched in acidified mesocosms. In total, 40% of the transcripts enriched upon acidification were assigned to mechanisms maintaining pH homeostasis. This suggests that acidification-induced proton stress is counteracted by energetically costly proton extrusion mechanisms, purportedly leaving less energy for other metabolic processes. Taxonomic assignment of transcripts showed distinct gene expression patterns among dominant bacterial groups, but also viruses, caused by acidification. These previously unrecognized responses were not visible under phytoplankton bloom conditions that strongly stimulated bacterial growth. Hence, effects of ocean acidification could have particularly pronounced consequences for the energetics and ecosystem functioning of bacterioplankton in oligotrophic conditions. 35 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Juan José Rodríguez Serrano, Jenny Ask, Agneta Andersson Effects of increased pCO2 and terrestrial organic matter on phytoplankton and bacterioplankton activity and community structure Nowadays, the entire scientific community is aware of the exponential increase in the global atmospheric pCO2 levels. One of the most important effects of such an increase in pCO2 is the acidification of the oceanic water masses, causing increased dissolution of calcium carbonate, which is part of many biological structures. Recent research has also studied the effect of higher CO 2 concentration in seawater on the basic levels of the foodweb in a more ecological context, showing an increase in phytoplankton and bacterial activity. Furthermore, the increased input of terrestrial organic matter to aquatic ecosystems, due to higher terrestrial primary production and a concurrent increase in river discharge, is causing a “brownification” of inland and coastal waters. In the northern Baltic Sea both elevated atmospheric levels of CO2 and input of terrestrial organic matter are important environmental factors for coastal aquatic food-webs. In this study we tested the single and combined effects of increasing CO2 and terrestrial organic matter on the phytoplankton and bacterioplankton communities present in seawater from a coastal area in the Gulf of Bothnia. Preliminary results show a trend of increasing bacterial and phytoplankton activity throughout the experiment, with a depletion of phytoplankton activity in the last days. 36 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Per-Arvid Berglund Razorbill (Alca torda) breeding success decreases with laying date – potential for complementing sprat (Sprattus sprattus) stock assessments and ecosystem management in the Baltic Sea? Marine ecosystems face drastic declines in fish stocks, commercial fishing being the prominent reason for the rapid change. Depletion of one species often affects other parts of the ecosystem. Stock-size data informing Baltic Sea fishing regulation negotiations are today based on numbers from independent scientific acoustic surveys as well as numbers reported from commercial fisheries. Additional effective ways of acquiring accurate data to complement existing survey methods could enhance data resolution, and extend our knowledge of ecosystem functions. Using seabirds as indicators of marine ecosystem changes are practiced globally, as seabird life history traits often make them react to specific changes such as fluctuating fish stock compositions. In the Baltic Sea, the clupeid sprat (Sprattus spratus) is common and economically important, and at the island Stora Karlsö the alcid, the common murre (Uria aalge) (also known as common guillemot), has been monitored for many years with breeding-related responses linked to changes in sprat parameters. Studying response diversity in species that have similar but not identical life history traits can enhance knowledge of responses to changing ecosystems. The alcid, the razorbill (Alca torda), shares breeding sites and preference of sprat with the murres at Stora Karlsö, however their exact time of breeding and their foraging behavior differs to some extent. In this study of Stora Karlsö razorbills, no significant change in breeding success could be linked to changing sprat stock parameters (quality and quantity) over five years. This could be due to few years of razorbill breeding data available. However, as in the murres, razorbill breeding success decreased significantly as the breeding season progressed: the later razorbill pairs started breeding, the smaller were their chances of succeeding to raise young. Future studies are needed to conclude if this trend depends on annual variations in locally available sprat and its energy content, interspecific competition with the murres, climate effects, or other trade-off related factors. Learning more about timing of breeding and detectable responses to changing prey parameters can enhance the resolution of data used from indicator species and increase knowledge about interspecies interactions. Eventually this can show in what way natural mechanisms in the ecosystem can be used to survey and manage marine resources, while increasing the quality of fish stock models. 37 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Natalia Barrientos Southern Ocean paleoceanographic changes at the Eocene-Oligocene climate transition: a meridional deepsea transect of the Kerguelen Plateau This thesis investigates paleoceanographic changes from the late Eocene - early Oligocene climate transition (EOT) on the Kerguelen Plateau (KP) submerged igneous province in the Southern Indian Ocean. This transition is characterized by the onset of permanent ice-sheets over Antarctica. However, forces and feedbacks of this glaciation on Southern Ocean circulation remains focus of debate. At present, the Antarctic Polar Front is located at the northern part of the KP where the cold northward- owing Antarctic waters converge and sink below warmer waters of the sub-Antarctic. This results in a narrow circumpolar oceanic belt extremely high in primary productivity, that shows a shift from biocalcareous sedimentary deposits to the north and biosiliceous to the south. In this thesis, the position of the Polar Front across the KP is studied. This is to test the hypothesis that the Polar Front shifted northward across the KP at the EOT, because of a change in the latitudinal thermal gradient between equator and pole driven by the impact of Antarctica glaciation. To achieve that, I have produced new paleoceanographic data for three ODP sites drilled during Leg 183 (Sites 1138, 1139 and 1140). The sites cover the northern and central latitudinal transect of the KP. The lithological characteristics at these sites are analyzed and the rst high-medium resolution benthic foraminifera stable isotope records are generated from central and northern KP. The obtained isotope records are correlated with available records from southern KP (Sites 748, 744 and 738) from the late Eocene and early Oligocene to produce a paleoceanographic N-S transect spanning 20 of latitude. The results of this synthesis show that regional northern KP intermediate waters at the three new sites have similar oxygen isotope values compared to southern KP sites in the latest Eocene. This suggests the location of the Polar Front south of the KP with warm Indian Ocean conditions extended over KP. Conversely, there are differences in the oxygen isotope values between the three new sites and southern KP at the earliest Oligocene. This is coeval with a biosilica facies change found at southern KP during EOT. Finally, the results are incorporated into a larger framework where the KP isotope records are compared with records from the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean and globally. Latitudinal variations along the Southern Ocean were observed suggesting relative colder intermediate/bottom waters at sites close to the Antarctic continent until reaching central KP, indicating that the Antarctic Polar Front, if present as we know it today, was located between central and southern KP at the EOT. 38 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Poster presentations Katarina Abrahamsson, Anders Backman, Jan Bergholtz, Johan Pettersson, Ullika Lundgren R/V Skagerak – University of Gothenburg´s New Research Vessel In June 2013, the vice chancellor at the University of Gothenburg decided to start the process to build a replacement for the 36 year old research vessel Skagerak, which is still in active duty. The ship will be delivered autumn 2015. The ship will be a platform for multidisciplinary scientific research and educational expeditions. The ship will be equipped with launch and recovery systems for a large variety of scientific equipment such as CTD, coring devices, remotely and autonomous operated vehicles, sledges, trawls etc. In addition, the ship is equipped with multibeam echosounder, sub-bottom profiler, under water positioning system, and a clean surface water supply to laboratories. The aft deck is spacious enough to mount 20 feet containerised laboratories. Also, the ship has a mast on fore deck to facilitate air sampling for atmospheric studies. The ship is designed, constructed and equipped for year-round service in areas from shallow coastal waters and estuaries to deep waters mainly along the Swedish coast line, in the Baltic Sea. However, the ship has no constraints regarding which seas to investigate. The range of the ship is around 2 000 nautical miles with an endurance of 14 days. A maximum of 16 scientists and 5 crew members can participate in longer cruises, and the ship is a special purpose ship which allows for student groups of 30 persons for day tours. The ship is capable of safe navigation in ice in full compliance with the Finnish-Swedish Ice Class 1B. The environmental aspects have been given the highest priority throughout the planning and construction phase. The ship will be in full compliance with the convention for marine pollution prevention (MARPOL) and the ballast water convention, as well as the convention for anti-fouling and the convention for ship recycling and inventory of hazardous compounds. 39 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Johannes Asplund-Samuelsson, John Larsson, Chris L. Dupont, Birgitta Bergman, Karolina Ininbergs, Martin Ekman Bacterial metacaspases, programmed cell death and population dynamics in the Baltic Sea Cyanobacteria are primary producers, often nitrogen-fixing, that influence many aspects of the Baltic Sea ecosystems, e.g. through annual blooms. In Trichodesmium erythraeum, a tropical marine bloom-forming cyanobacterium, expression of metacaspase proteases is tied to programmed cell death (PCD) and stress experienced during bloom conditions. We hypothesise that blooming cyanobacteria in the Baltic Sea may also express metacaspases and that these possibly promote population collapse. Bacterial metacaspases are homologs of caspases, which play important roles in eukaryotic PCD by facilitating orderly dismantling of unwanted or damaged cells. Our metagenomic and metatranscriptomic data suggests that a variety of metacaspases are carried by bacteria in the Baltic Sea, but that they are expressed to the greatest extent by cyanobacteria. A number of different expression patterns were observed for the summer season of 2012 at Askö in the Stockholm archipelago, pointing to a variety of functional specializations for these genes. Positive correlation to total expression of mRNA for the population, a proxy for population size, was observed for two metacaspases in Nodularia spumigena, a species of bloom-forming cyanobacteria, and one metacaspase in an organism closely resembling Microcystis aeruginosa. Presently, studies are under way linking e.g. stress-related genes to the expression of cyanobacterial metacaspases. 40 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Åsa Berglund, Matyas Ripszam, Christine Gallampois, Agneta Andersson, Evelina Griniene, Daniela Figueroa, Pär Byström, Peter Haglund, Mats Tysklind Bioaccumulation of organic pollutants in present-day and climate altered food webs We examined the effects of a warming climate on the accumulation of organic pollutants (OPs) in the Gulf of Bothnia. This region has a long history of pollution and is highly influenced by river run-off. With the proposed changes in climate (increased temperature and precipitation) an increased run-off to the sea is expected, hence an increased input of dissolved organic matter (DOC) and potentially also OPs. Studies have shown that increasing temperature and DOC results in a shift at the base of the food web, favoring bacteria over phytoplankton. This creates more trophic levels, thus in theory top consumers may accumulate higher concentrations of OPs. In this mesocosm-study we exposed a marine community for a cocktail of legacy and emerging OPs, using different climate scenarios (increased temperature and DOC). We found evidence for a bacteria favored food web with increasing DOC but the concentration of OPs in fish were not higher in DOCtreated mesocosms. If any, higher temperature resulted in increased OP concentrations in fish but at higher temperatures DOC generally reduced the OP concentrations. Thus, increased temperature may be an important factor for accumulation of OPs in fish, but DOC may reduce the availability of OPs. 41 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Caroline Bringensparr Glacial morphology and bathymetric mapping in Melville Bay, Western Greenland During the VEGA Expedition, in June 2013, reflectivity (backscatter) and depth data was acquired with a multibeam echosounder from an approximately 140 km2 large area in Melville Bay, off the coast of Western Greenland. One of the expedition objectives was to search for and map evidences of a grounded ice sheet, which is likely to have reached the edge of the continental shelf during the Last Glacial Maximum, about 20000 years ago. In this study, the acquired depth data was compiled to a detailed bathymetric map, which was used to map the extension of morphological features caused by the ice sheet’s progression over the area. The results show bedrock erosion in the form of linear features, melt-water channels and different types of depressions. The surface sediment distribution, based on the reflectivity data, presents coarser sediment such as gravel in the deeper parts of the survey area as well as in channels and depressions, while finer sediments such as silt and clay can be found generally in the remainder of the area. The conclusion is that the results strongly suggests there have been glacial erosion in this area, however it is not possible to determine when this took place without age determination of bottom samples. For a more comprehensive understanding of the glacial history in Melville and Baffin Bay, more surveys of this kind are necessary. 42 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Sonia Brugel, Johan Wikner, Ulf Båmstedt Physical control of phytoplankton spatio-temporal variations in the coastal Bothnian Sea Coastal systems are highly dynamic environments where biological processes are strongly driven by physical forcing, e.g. wind, currents, river run-off, at different scales in time and space. One important issue is to evaluate the impact of hydrodynamic events on phytoplankton. A survey of phytoplankton dynamics has been conducted in a coastal area under the influence of the Öre River (Northwestern Bothnian Sea) to study physical control of phytoplankton spatio-temporal variations. The investigation of spatial variations implies sampling cruises of short-time at fine spatial resolution and fast collection of data. Therefore, vertical profiling of multisensors platforms has been performed at 21 stations over the Öre bay at a weekly frequency from June to December 2013, in order to cover a wide range of environmental conditions. The different sensors gave information on the vertical distribution of temperature, salinity, light (Photosynthetically Available Radiations), turbidity, coloured dissolved organic matter, dissolved oxygen and chlorophyll. These data together with environmental data such as downwelling irradiance, wind speed and direction, river discharge (flow, sediments and nutrients) and waves characteristics will be analysed in order to address the complex interaction of environmental driving forces on phytoplankton dynamics. 43 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Jenny Egardt Impacts of outdoor recreation in marine coastal areas Outdoor recreation can be defined as activities for leisure purposes in the outdoors, in a natural or seminatural setting. Activities in marine areas range from sunbathing and kayaking to sailing, speed boating and seal-safaris, satisfying aspects of adventure as well as mental well-being. Kosterhavet is a marine national park, formed in 2009 and home to a wide variety of species, both in the water and on land. With 500000 visitors per year it is a very popular area for recreational activities. Most visits however occur during the summer season, which creates a high pressure on the environment. A lot of visitors come in their own boats, visiting both the guest harbors on the Koster Islands as well as the natural harbors in the archipelago. Anchors from boats can cause abrasions on the bottom substrates; they can scrape macro-algae from hard-bottoms and tear the rhizomes of eel-grass on sandy substrates. They also displace sediment, possibly re-introducing compounds buried by sedimentation. Leisure boats are also a direct source of potentially harmful substances from antifouling paints. Since there is such a high visitor number in the natural harbors it would be interesting to see how levels of antifouling paint components in these areas compare to areas with no anchoring as well as small harbors. Sediments have therefor been sampled, both at surface level and at 10 cm depth in a sediment core, from natural harbors, small marinas and areas with little or no anchoring. Samples from 10 cm depth are both a historical reference of substances but also gives an idea of what can be re-introduced to the area. The sampled sediments are being analyzed for metal content, organic tin compounds, Irgarol 1051 and organic carbon content. The metal content will also be determined by X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and compared to the values given by the chemical analysis to see if XRF can be a useful method to monitor metal content in sediments. 44 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Kari Eilola, Elin Almroth-Rosell, H.E. Markus Meier Impact of saltwater inflows on phosphorus cycling and eutrophication in the Baltic Sea: a 3D model study The impact of dense saltwater inflows on the phosphorus dynamics in the Baltic Sea is studied from tracer experiments with a three-dimensional physical model. The coasts of the North West Gotland Basin and the Gulf of Finland, the Estonian coast in the East Gotland Basin are regions where modelled tracers from below the halocline are primarily lifted up above the halocline. After one year tracers are accumulated at the surface along the Swedish east coast and at the western and southern sides of Gotland. Elevated concentrations are also found east and southeast of Gotland, in the northern Bornholm Basin and in the central parts of the East Gotland Basin. The annual supplies of phosphorus from the deeper waters to the productive surface layers are estimated to be of the same order of magnitude as the waterborne inputs of phosphorus to the entire Baltic Sea. Largest regional increases in surface concentrations are found after large inflows. However, the overall direct impact of major Baltic inflows on the annual uplift of nutrients from below the halocline to the surface waters is small because vertical transports are comparably large also during periods without major inflows. Our model results suggest that phosphorus released from the sediments between 60 and 100 m depth in the East Gotland Basin contributes to the eutrophication, especially in the coastal regions of the eastern Baltic Proper. 45 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Evelina Grinienė, Åsa Berglund, Daniela Figueroa, Agneta Andersson Trophic role of ciliates in present-day and climate-altered pelagic food webs Current climate change scenarios for the northern Baltic Sea indicate that the global temperature will increase in the future and that precipitation will be altered. Increased precipitation will lead to larger river discharge, accompanied by higher inflow of allochthonous organic carbon (ADOC). This may cause a change at the base of the food web, favoring bacteria over phytoplankton. Ciliates may become an important intermediate trophic link in the food web. We performed an experiment where effects of 4 oC higher temperature and increased ADOC input on the pelagic food web channeling were studied. The taxonomic and functional diversity of ciliates were analyzed as well as their grazing rates on bacteria and phytoplankton fractions. It was found that the “climate altered” system favoured bacterivorous naked oligotrichs and peritrichs, while than algivorous tintinnids were promoted in the “present-day” system. Grazing experiment showed that slightly more energy was channeled from bacteria and up the food web in the “climate-altered” system, while the “phytoplanktonpathway” was more important in the “present-day” system. Our data indicate that climate change will cause alterations of the food web function in coastal systems. 46 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Mikael Gustavsson, Jörgen Magnér, Thomas Backhaus Risk assessment of chemical mixtures on the Swedish west coast using data from water monitoring In a recent screening campaign more than 60 different chemical compounds were detected in water from the Swedish west coast. The screening campaign covered five different sites and a total of 172 different compounds from a variety of different chemical use classes. The detected compounds included, for instance, pesticides, pharmaceuticals, phtalates and surfactants. For all detected compounds the environmental quality standard of the compound was thereafter determined. Data was gathered, primarily from the water framework directive and the REACH (Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and restriction of Chemicals) registry database. The combination of detected concentrations and environmental quality standards enables a ranking of risk from the individual chemical compounds found at the Swedish west coast, as well as a determination of the risk from the combined exposure. Results show that triclosan was the compound that most often exceeded the environmental quality standard. Also, at none of the five sites where samples were taken was the combined risk from the exposure at acceptable levels. Finally, all environmental quality standards gathered has been compared to modelled toxicity data to determine the risks from using computerbased technologies as opposed to experimental data. 47 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Joakim Hansen Applying a macrophyte community index to assess anthropogenic pressures on shallow soft bottoms Vegetated soft bottoms are under pressure due to a number of anthropogenic stressors, such as coastal exploitation and eutrophication. The ecological value of these biotopes has gained recognition through international conventions and the EU directives, which request methods for assessment of the environmental status of coastal areas. However, currently there is no appropriate method for assessing the status of shallow vegetated soft bottoms in the northern Baltic Sea. Therefore, we developed a macrophyte community index and tested its response in relation to important pressures and natural gradients on shallow bays in the northern Baltic Sea. The macrophyte index, and hence the proportion of sensitive slow-growing to fastgrowing shade-tolerant species, decreased with increasing phosphorus concentration, turbidity and level of boating activity. Juvenile fish abundance was positively related to the index, indicating importance of sensitive macrophyte species for ecosystem functioning. As the index was tested in a wide geographic area, and showed a uniform response across natural gradients, it is a promising tool for assessment of environmental status that may be applied also in other regions. 48 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES E. Therese Harvey, Susanne Kratzer, Agneta Andersson Distributions and optical properties of Coloured Dissolved Organic Matter (CDOM) and Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) in coastal gradients of the Baltic Sea The largest pool of carbon near the surface on Earth is found in the oceans as Dissolved Organic Matter (DOM) of which Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) stands for a major part. The Baltic Sea is rich in Coloured Dissolved Organic Matter (CDOM) that is closely linked to the DOC pool. CDOM absorption stands for the main contribution of the total absorption in the Baltic Sea. CDOM absorption influences the underwater light field by regulating the Photosynthetically Active Radiation that is available for phytoplankton. Despite its diverse ecological importance in the marine systems CDOM is poorly studied in the Baltic Sea and not routinely measured within monitoring programs. The distribution, concentrations and relationships between CDOM, DOC, salinity and Secchi depth are variable. Here, we present in situ data of CDOM, DOC and their relationships from coastal gradients in the Gulf of Bothnia and the Baltic proper. We investigated relationships between CDOM absorption, g440, spectral slope of CDOM absorption; S350-500, DOC concentration, salinity and Secchi depth in the different regions by generalized linear models. The average absorption was much higher (g440 up to 8.8 m-1) in the northern part, whereas the S350-500 was more variable in the central Baltic. We found significant relationships between the northern (very high CDOM) part compared to the central Baltic Sea. The proportion of non-coloured DOC was derived for the respective areas and differed substantially. The results are important for management, for evaluating changes in Secchi depth and the productive status of the Baltic Sea. Further knowledge of CDOM dynamics is required for refining remote sensing algorithms, especially in regions with higher CDOM concentrations. 49 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Isabella Lindstrøm Larsen Effects of climate change on the food quality of Baltic phytoplankton – In the laboratory and in the field The effect of increasing temperature and carbon dioxide partial pressure (pCO2) on assembly and biochemical composition of a natural phytoplankton community of the Baltic Sea was studied in an out-door mesocosm experiment over a period of 12 days. Sixteen mesocosms of ~45L each were exposed to two different temperature and CO2 levels representing present day and projected levels by year 2100. During the study, the relative biomass of dinoflagellates was affected negatively by temperature, while the contribution of the fatty acid 18:1ω9 increased with temperature. The effect of projected CO 2 on the food quality of two indigenous Baltic Sea algae was studied in a laboratory monoculture experiment. The indirect effects on copepod growth and reproduction were also tested. In Rhodomonas baltica, CO2 had a negative effect on the essential C 18 polyunsaturated fatty acids 18:3ω3 and 18:4ω3. No changes in stoichiometry were seen in any of the experiments. Copepods fed 50:50 mix cultures grown at high CO2 showed tendencies for impaired development. However, this was not statistically significant. These studies show that the nutritional quality of algae may be affected, but do not confirm a general lowered food quality of phytoplankton in the future oceans. 50 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Nurun Nahar, Björn Andersson, Isabell Klawonn, Jakob Walve, Martin Whitehouse, Helle Ploug Carbon and N2 fixation by Aphanizomenon sp. Nodularia spumigena, and Dolichospermum spp in the Baltic Sea Proper Using the dual labeling approach with stable isotope tracers ( 13C-bicarbonate and 15N2) combined with mass spectrometry, we investigated the role of the N 2-fixing cyanobacteria, Aphanizomenon sp., Nodularia spumigena, and Dolichospermum spp (formerly Anabaena spp.) with respect to carbon and nitrogen fixation within the phytoplankton community in the Baltic Sea Proper. In situ depth profiles of community composition, C- and N2-fixation were measured during June, July, and August 2013. The average C:N (mol:mol) ratio of the particulate organic matter in the water column was 8.7. Assuming a C:N ratio of 6.6 (Redfield ratio) of the phytoplankton community, N2 fixation covered between 5-40% of the nitrogen demand by the community, depending on community composition, depth, and season. N 2-fixation in June was similar to that measured in July and higher than that measured in August. Secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) is a high spatial resolution technique by which isotopic composition and cell identity can be measured simultaneously in mixed field populations. We will present the first in situ data of cell-specific C- and N2-fixation rate that was measured by SIMS in Aphanizomenon sp., Nodularia spumigena, and Dolichospermum spp as a function of depth in the Baltic Sea Proper. 51 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Oscar Nordahl, Petter Tibblin, Anders Forsman, Per Larsson Life-history strategies differ among sympatric subpopulations of anadromous pike (Esox lucius) Pike (Esox lucius) is a top-predator in the coastal fish community in the Baltic Sea. Previous studies have shown natal site fidelity among anadromous pike in this area. As a result, several subpopulations are coexisting on a micro geographic scale, only separated spatially during spawning. Body size-distribution and growth trajectories have been observed to differ among them, and hence, it has been hypothesized that this reflects local adaptation of life-history traits important for fisheries management. We studied variation in life-history strategies among 4 coexisting subpopulations of pike. Reproductive effort, fecundity and egg size differed significantly, giving every subpopulation its own suite of pike life-history characteristics. These results, together with a consistent somatic condition suggest different strategies of energy allocation between subpopulations, despite the intraspecific level and the fact that they only separate during spawning. For fisheries management this implies that coexisting subpopulations of pike cannot be treated as one unit. Furthermore, subpopulations may differ in their capacity to produce large, game-sized individuals due to their inherited strategy of energy allocation between growth, reproduction and longevity. 52 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Johan Wikner, Kevin Vikström, Anders Tengberg Precise measurements of pelagic respiration by Oxygen Optodes with Titanium housing An analytical setup for respiration rate measurements was developed and evaluated in pelagic water samples using a commercially available optical oxygen sensor with titanium housing (Optode). A gas tight stopper was developed to connect the sensors to a 1 dm3 glass sample bottle, precise temperature control (± 0.05 C) and proper stirring of samples. The detection limit and precision of for individual sensors was 0.96 mmol O2 m-3 day-1. This was slightly higher than the best detection limit for the high-precision Winkler titration method reported in field studies. By using replicate sensors the detection limit could be improved to 0.14 mmol O2 m-3 day-1. The main source of uncertainty was a necessary correction for system drift, which was reduced substantially by use of titanium housing as compared to plastic housing. When compared with the Winkler method, the Optode sensor enabled operator independent, high temporal resolution measurement of respiration, better coverage of plankton groups and detection of non-linear oxygen decline, without the need for wet chemistry. We conclude that the developed Optode system can be used to measure respiration in productive coastal waters. Samples from oceanic deep waters will often be below the detection limit. 53 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Conference dinner in Umea: Guitars – The Museum The conference dinner will be held at Guitars – Bar & Restaurant. From 2014 the whole world has the opportunity to take part of one of the world’s largest private collections of guitars. It is the Umeå brothers Samuel and Michael Åhdén’s unique collection of guitars, basses, amplifiers and musical props that form the basis for a comprehensive exhibition. The conference dinner at Guitars will start at 19.00 with a round-tour in the museum, and then we will be served a XXX in the restaurant. 54 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES List of Participants Last name First name University/authority E-mail Ahlgren Joakim Umeå University [email protected] Albertsson Jan Umeå University [email protected] Almroth-Rosell Elin SMHI [email protected] Andersson Agneta Umeå University [email protected] Ask Jenny Umeå University [email protected] Asplund-Samuelsson Johannes Stockholm University [email protected] Assefa Anteneh Umeå University [email protected] Backman Sofie Kalmar kommun [email protected] Bergkvist Johanna Göteborgs Universitet [email protected] Berglund Åsa Umeå university [email protected] Berglund Johnny Länsstyrelsen [email protected] Berglund Per-Arvid Stockholms Universitet [email protected] Brenner Ulrika Stockholm University [email protected] Bringensparr Caroline Stockholm University [email protected] Brugel Sonia Umeå University [email protected] Bunse Carina Linnaeus University [email protected] Byström Pär Umeå University [email protected] Celander Gun Umeå Universitet [email protected] Crona Johanna Umeå Universitet [email protected] Dagberg Nina Umeå universitet [email protected] Dimming Anna Länsstyrelsen Västra Götalands län [email protected] Egardt Jenny University of Gothenburg [email protected] Elfwing Tina Stockholm University [email protected] Engel Anja Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel [email protected] Engström-Öst Jonna Åbo Akademi University [email protected] Figueroa Daniela Umeå University [email protected] Forsman Anders Linnaeus University [email protected] 55 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Gammeltoft Annica Länsstyrelsen i Norrbottens län [email protected] Griniene Evelina Umeå University [email protected] Gustafsson Erik Stockholms Universitet [email protected] Gustavsson Mikael University of Gothenburg [email protected] Hansen Joakim Stockholm University [email protected] Hassellov Ida-Maja Chalmers University of Technology [email protected] Huseby Siv Umeå University [email protected] Hutchings Jeffrey Dalhousie University [email protected] Israelsson Stina Linnaeus University [email protected] Karlson Agnes Stockholm University [email protected] Karlsson Chatarina Umeå universitet [email protected] Konradsson Katarina Umeå Universitet [email protected] Larsson Per Linneaus University [email protected] Laugen Ane T. Åbo Akademi [email protected] Liess Antonia Umeå University [email protected] Lindh Markus Linnaeus University [email protected] Magnhagen Carin SLU [email protected] Nahar Nurun University of Gothenburg [email protected] Nordahl Oscar Linnaeus University [email protected] Olofsson Malin Göteborgs Universitet [email protected] Paczkowska Joanna Umea University [email protected] Paz von Friesen Carlos Länsstyrelsen i Västerbotten [email protected] Pekkarinen Rieppo Hanna-Mari Länsstyrelsen i Västra Götaland [email protected] Rodríguez Serrano Juan José Umeå University [email protected] Rolff Carl Stockholm University [email protected] Rådman Petra Umeå universitet [email protected] Stenman Åsa Umeå Universitet [email protected] Tibblin Petter Linnaeus University [email protected] Tidlund Annika Stockholm University [email protected] Turner David University of Gothenburg [email protected] Viklund Kristina Umeå universitet [email protected] Vikström Kevin Umeå University [email protected] 56 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES Vøllestad Asbjørn University of Oslo [email protected] Westling Anna SLU [email protected] Wikner Johan Umeå universitet [email protected] Åstrand Capetillo Nastassja Stockholm University [email protected] 57 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES 58 SVENSKA HAVSFORSKNINGSFÖRENINGEN THE SWEDISH SOCIETY FOR MARINE SCIENCES The Swedish Society for Marine Sciences is a nonprofit organization with a mission to promote cooperation between Swedish institutions and individuals who take a professional interest in the marine environment. As part of promoting the goals of our society, we organize the Marine Sciences Conference. This annual event is open to researchers, governmental organizations and private interest groups and serves as a great platform to present work and have discussions on current marine issues. © Katarina Stenman 59