Saturday, June 4, 2011

So what exactly am I doing with all this algae?

This is what I have been doing for the past week.

We've gone diving at sites in Nahant and in Rye, NH and put down 0.5m x 0.5m PVC quadrats like the one below. First, we visually identify each species of algae and record the approximate percentage of the quadrat that it takes up. Then we collect all the algae in the in the quadrat, put it in a bag and take it back to the lab. We collect about 10 bags per site.

This is a quadrat (pre-collection) from Nahant last year. I haven't yet taken my camera underwater this summer.


In the lab, we sort the algae by species and clean it - i.e. remove little critters like amphipods, isopods, little crabs, little starfish*. The result is something like in the picture - neat piles of algae on a lab tray. Then we weigh the algae by species in two ways: 'fresh weight' which is just spinning it down in a salad spinner to remove excess water and then putting it on a scale; and 'dry weight' which is putting it in an oven at about 65ÂșC so that it is completely dried out, and then weighing it (this destroys the algae so you can't do anything with it after).

This is all the algae from one (0.5 m x 0.5 m) quadrat from our Rye, NH collection site. I am pretty sure that if I cleaned up the algae up a bit better and arranged everything a bit more prettily, I could convince someone that it is some kind of Japanese delicacy that they should try.


This whole long process gives us estimates of two things:
1. How many species of algae are out there, and what they are
2. How much of each species is out there, in absolute terms and relative to the others. This can be measured by percentage cover of the quadrat or by weight. We are doing both to see how well the two agree (i.e. if one is an accurate proxy for the other).

These two things can then be used to tell us plenty of other things such as how diverse the algal community is, and which species we should use in lab experiments.


*This is described in one sentence, but is the longest, most tedious part of the whole process. It took us <1 hour of underwater time to collect 10 bags of algae, and a full day to clean, sort and weigh only 7 of those bags. During the process I wrote this song.

The Algae Song
(to the tune of "Daisy Bell")
Algae, Algae, give me your answers true
I've gone crazy, just from sorting you
The amphipods are too many
And Desmarestia is nasty
But soon I'll find
If Hetsiph might
Influence diversity

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