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Publication - Overview of the MOSAiC expedition: Ecosystem

Allison A. Fong, Clara J. M. Hoppe, et al., 2024. Overview of the MOSAiC expedition: Ecosystem. Elem Sci Anth 12 (1)
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Abstract

The international and interdisciplinary sea-ice drift expedition “The Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate” (MOSAiC) was conducted from October 2019 to September 2020. The aim of MOSAiC was to study the interconnected physical, chemical, and biological characteristics and processes from the atmosphere to the deep sea of the central Arctic system. The ecosystem team addressed current knowledge gaps and explored unknown biological properties over a complete seasonal cycle focusing on three major research areas: biodiversity, biogeochemical cycles, and linkages to the environment. In addition to the measurements of core properties along a complete seasonal cycle, dedicated projects covered specific processes and habitats, or organisms on higher taxonomic or temporal resolution in specific time windows. A wide range of sampling instruments and approaches, including sea-ice coring, lead sampling with pumps, rosette-based water sampling, plankton nets, remotely operated vehicles, and acoustic buoys, was applied to address the science objectives. Further, a broad range of process-related measurements to address, for example, productivity patterns, seasonal migrations, and diversity shifts, were made both in situ and onboard RV Polarstern. This article provides a detailed overview of the sampling approaches used to address the three main science objectives. It highlights the core sampling program and provides examples of habitat- or process-specific sampling. The initial results presented include high biological activities in wintertime and the discovery of biological hotspots in underexplored habitats. The unique interconnectivity of the coordinated sampling efforts also revealed insights into cross-disciplinary interactions like the impact of biota on Arctic cloud formation. This overview further presents both lessons learned from conducting such a demanding field campaign and an outlook on spin-off projects to be conducted over the next years.

Authors

NameOrganization
Allison A. Fong
Clara J. M. Hoppe
Nicole Aberle
Carin J. Ashjian
Philipp Assmy
Youcheng Bai
Dorothee C. E. Bakker
John P. Balmonte
Kevin R. Barry
Stefan Bertilsson
William Boulton
Jeff Bowman
Deborah Bozzato
Gunnar Bratbak
Moritz Buck
Robert G. Campbell
Giulia Castellani
Emelia J. Chamberlain
Jianfang Chen
Melissa Chierici
Astrid Cornils
Jessie M. Creamean
Ellen Damm
Klaus Dethloff
Elise S. Droste
Oliver Ebenhöh
Sarah L. Eggers
Anja Engel
Hauke Flores
Agneta Fransson
Stephan Frickenhaus
Jessie Gardner
Cecilia E. Gelfman
Mats A. Granskog
Martin Graeve
Charlotte Havermans
Céline Heuzé
Nicole Hildebrandt
Thomas C. J. Hill
Mario Hoppema
Antonia Immerz
Haiyan Jin
Boris P. Koch
Xianyu Kong
Alexandra Kraberg
Musheng Lan
Benjamin A. Lange
Aud Larsen
Benoit Lebreton
Eva Leu
Brice Loose
Wieslaw Maslowski
Camille Mavis
Katja Metfies
Thomas Mock
Oliver Müller
Marcel Nicolaus
Barbara Niehoff
Daiki Nomura
Eva-Maria Nöthig
Marc Oggier
Ellen Oldenburg
Lasse Mork Olsen
Ilka Peeken
Donald K. Perovich
Ovidiu Popa
Benjamin Rabe
Jian Ren
Markus Rex
Annette Rinke
Sebastian Rokitta
Björn Rost
Serdar Sakinan
Evgenii Salganik
Fokje L. Schaafsma
Hendrik Schäfer
Katrin Schmidt
Katyanne M. Shoemaker
Matthew D. Shupe
Pauline Snoeijs-Leijonmalm
Jacqueline Stefels
Anders Svenson
Ran Tao
Sinhué Torres-Valdés
Anders Torstensson
Andrew Toseland
Adam Ulfsbo
Maria A. Van Leeuwe
Martina Vortkamp
Alison L. Webb
Yanpei Zhuang
Rolf R. Gradinger

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Doi: 10.1525/elementa.2023.00135 | UUID: 1230df4b-a3b3-5462-a8db-806843ac6d7f | Version:1 | Added on: 22 January 2026 14:02