Project: RAPID: Hurricane Impact on Phytoplankton Community Dynamics and Metabolic Response

Acronym/Short Name:HRR
Project Duration:2017-11 - 2019-10
Geolocation:Texas coast

Description

NSF Award Abstract:
Hurricane Harvey is the strongest hurricane to hit the Texas coast in decades and the resulting tidal surges, flooding and terrestrial runoff have had a severe impact on the coastal ocean. The effects on the phytoplankton, the first link in the food chain, may be unprecedented. To determine how the phytoplankton community will respond to such drastic changes in salinity, nutrient inputs, and potential toxins, immediate and continuous sampling is the only way to fully capture the effects and to identify when conditions return to "normal". An automated, continuous phytoplankton imaging instrument that is deployed on the Texas coast records images of the phytoplankton and permits calculation of the abundance of different species. Together with molecular information on the genes that have been "turned on", or expressed, outcomes of this project will help determine the responses of individual types of phytoplankton. Extreme storms are expected to increase in frequency with future climate change, so the responses identified now will be valuable in predicting how such events will affect these primary producers, which in turn support most of the food webs in marine ecosystems, in the future.

High temporal resolution observations from the Imaging FlowCytobot (IFCB) have revealed that hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico cause drastic changes in the phytoplankton community structure. The objectives of this RAPID project are: 1) to characterize the dynamics of the phytoplankton species in relation to the environmental variables along the Texas coast; 2) to assess the short and long-term changes in the phytoplankton community; and 3) to identify the strategies of the phytoplankton community for resource acquisition. To accomplish these objectives, this project will utilize IFCB time series to follow phytoplankton community structure during the recovery period from Hurricane Harvey. In addition, two RAPID response cruises (in late September and early October) to sample at 5 sites along a transect from Galveston to Port Aransas, TX. At each station, CTD profiles and water samples from surface and the chlorophyll maximum will be collected for nutrients, carbonate chemistry, and RNA sequencing for metatranscriptomic analysis. Metatranscriptomics can provide an indication of the metabolic strategies employed and functional relationships within the plankton community in response to changes in the environment. The advantage of a metatranscriptomic approach is that the entire molecular response to the environment is captured. So, while the response of phytoplankton to increased nutrient inputs from floodwater runoff is targeted, the responses to other environmental stresses (toxics, hypoxia, acidification) are also captured. Analyses of this time series using multivariate statistical techniques, such as principal component analysis (PCA), and network analysis, a powerful technique for identifying potential interactions among taxa, will provide insights on the environmental factors and metabolic responses structuring the community during the aftermath of the hurricane.

Related data from the The Texas Observatory for Algal Succession Time-Series (TOAST) can be found at the following: https://toast.tamu.edu/timeline?dataset=HRR_Cruise


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Results of 18S sequencing of full-length 18S rDNA for metabarcoding samples collected during R/V Point Sur cruise PS18-09 in the Western Gulf of Mexico in September 20172024-03-14Final no updates expected
Cell abundances for taxonomic groups from manually corrected live Imaging FlowCytobot (IFCB) analysis of water samples collected from surface and chlorophyll maximum depths during R/V Pt. Sur cruise PS 18-09 in the western Gulf of Mexico, Sept-Oct 20172021-02-08Final no updates expected
Biomass of taxonomic groups from manually corrected live Imaging FlowCytobot (IFCB) analysis of water samples collected from surface and chlorophyll maximum depths during R/V Pt. Sur cruise PS 18-09 in the western Gulf of Mexico, Sept-Oct 20172021-02-08Final no updates expected
Cell abundances of taxonomic groups determined using a custom convolutional neural network from live Imaging FlowCytobot (IFCB) at seven stations sampled during R/V Pt. Sur cruise PS 18-09 in the western Gulf of Mexico, Sept-Oct 2017.2021-02-08Final no updates expected
Metabarcoding samples collected from surface and chlorophyll maximum depths from R/V Pt. Sur PS 18-09 Legs 01 and 03, Hurricane Harvey RAPID Response cruise (western Gulf of Mexico) September-October 2017.2020-09-11Final no updates expected
CTD profile data from R/V Pt. Sur PS 18-09 Legs 01 and 03, Sept. - Oct. 20172020-04-15Final no updates expected
Hydrographic, nutrient and oxygen data from CTD bottles and beam transmission and fluorescence data from CTD profiles during R/V Point Sur PS1809 (HRR legs 1, 2, 3) at the Gulf Mexico, Louisiana and Texas coast, Sept-Oct 20172019-12-12Final no updates expected

People

Principal Investigator: Lisa Campbell
Texas A&M University (TAMU)

Co-Principal Investigator: Darren W. Henrichs
Texas A&M University (TAMU)


Data Management Plan

DMP_Campbell_Henrichs_OCE-1760620.pdf (73.29 KB)
02/09/2025