4.3 Article

New distribution records of kelp in the Kitikmeot Region, Northwest Passage, Canada, fill a pan-Arctic gap

Journal

POLAR BIOLOGY
Volume 45, Issue 4, Pages 719-736

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00300-022-03007-6

Keywords

Arctic; Kelp; Alaria esculenta; Laminaria solidungula; Saccharina latissima; Northwest Passage; Habitat

Funding

  1. UiT The Arctic University of Norway
  2. Polar Knowledge Canada [NST-1617-0027]
  3. Institute of Ocean Sciences
  4. Department of Fisheries and Oceans Arctic Science Fund (2019)
  5. UiT -The Arctic University of Norway
  6. Tromso Research Foundation [01 vm/h15]
  7. University of Alaska Fairbanks

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Kelps play crucial roles in Arctic ecosystems by providing structural habitat, protection, and food supply. This research fills the knowledge gaps in kelp distribution in the southern Northwest Passage, Canadian Arctic Archipelago, and reports the occurrence of Laminaria solidungula, Saccharina latissima, and Alaria esculenta.
Kelps play important roles in ecosystems as they provide structural habitat and protection, and supply food. Given these beneficial roles and observed increases in seaweed biomass and distribution ranges across the Arctic, mapping kelp occurrence around Arctic coasts is both timely and necessary for future conservation. Here, we fill spatial gaps in the knowledge of kelp distribution in the southern Northwest Passage, Canadian Arctic Archipelago; specifically, we report the occurrence of Laminaria solidungula, Saccharina latissima and Alaria esculenta from Victoria and Dease straits and Bathurst Inlet in the Kitikmeot Region at depths mostly from 10 to 30 m (max. 40 m; upper extent vessel-limited). Kelp specimens were found at bottom water temperatures from sub-zero to 1 degrees C (surface-T to similar to 6 degrees C) and bottom water salinities of similar to 28 (surface-S < 20) in August-September. Kelp sites were characterized by both strong tidal currents (max. estimates from a tidal model 20-70 cm s(-1) in center of passages) and hard substrates, interspersed with finer sediments. Co-occurring identifiable epibenthos was dominated by suspension-feeders preferring currents (sea cucumbers, soft corals, Hiatella clams), potential kelp consumers (sea urchins Strongylocentrotus sp., Margarites snails, limpets) and predatory invertebrates (sea stars, lyre crabs). At the same and some deeper nearby sites, loose kelp fragments were also found at the seabed, suggesting that kelps contribute to the regional detrital food web by supplying carbon to less productive sites. Kelps in the region may expand their ranges and/or growing season with reduced ice cover and warming, although constraints through local turbidity sources, extreme temperatures, low salinity and low nutrient concentrations are also recognized.

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