- Ice algae
"Ice algae" is a general term used to describe all the various types of
algal communities encountered in annual and multi-year sea-ice. The ice algal communities play an important role inprimary production and are therefore considered an important part of both Polar ecosystems.Sea-ice algal communities can be found between ice crystals or attached to them, in the
interstitial water orbrine channels betweenice crystals , or simply associated with the undersurface of the ice.Although
phytoplankton production is greater than that of ice algae on an annual basis in most offshore regions of theSouthern Ocean , blooms of sea-ice algae differ considerably from the phytoplankton in terms of timing and distribution. Thus sea-ice algae provide food resources for highertrophic level organisms in seasons and regions where water column biological production is low or negligible.A different kind of ice algae live on glacier surfaces, a permanently cold freshwater ecosystem. Known members are Mesotaenium berggrenii or Ancylonema nordensskiöldii.
External links
* [http://www.eman-rese.ca/eman/ecotools/protocols/marine/seaicealgae/page1.html eman-rese.ca: ]
* [http://www.bioone.org/bioone/?request=get-document&issn=0003-1569&volume=041&issue=01&page=0057 BioOne]
* [http://psc.apl.washington.edu/pscweb2002/about.html Polar Science Center]
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