Goose barnacle growth rates measured from specimens collected in Celtic Sea in April 2018
Summary
This data resulted from an opportunistic interception of biofouled marine litter floating off the coast of Cornwall. A colony of goose barnacles ( Lepas anatifera) and a neustonic isopod *Idotea metallica *were found attached to the drifting litter. Both these species are not native to the UK. The interception was used as a case study to model the path of the drifting litter to a probable origin in the Western Atlantic, using the biological traits of the attached animals. This data contains photographic images, location map, and text describing the specimens collected from the litter, along with photos of the litter object. The floating litter was intercepted at 50.145 N 6.019 W between Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly on the 11/04/18 by the RV Cefas Endeavour. Forty-five individuals of goose barnacles were retained along with one specimen of the Isopod. Descriptions of each species are given. Measurements of the length of three goose barnacle plates (Capitellum, Scutum, and Carina) are included. By comparing total plate length against different growth rates, we could derive probable growth durations for each of the goose barnacle specimens and this was used to paramaterize our model.
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Keywords
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Use limitation statement
There are no public access constraints to this data. Use of this data is subject to the licence identified.
Licence
Open Government LicenceAttribution statement
See Cefas Data Portal for details – link to dataset below.
Technical information
Update frequency
notPlanned
Lineage
The litter object was collected opportunistically onboard the Cefas Endeavour, off the coast of Cornwall (50.145 N, 6.019 W). Photographs were taken on the deck after collection, and later on the quayside in Lowestoft. Goose barnacles (*Lepas anatifera*) and the single individual of *Idotea metallica *was photographed in the benthic laboratory in Cefas. A subset of 45 individuals of goose barnacle were measured along the long axis of each of three plates: Capitellum, Scutum, and Carina. These measurements were then divided by daily growth rates (taken from literature of oceanic daily growth rates for the species) for both Capitellum and Scutum to produce a likely growth period duration needed to reach that size. This estimate for how long it took both the Capitellum and Scutum to attain their size at the time of interception was used to inform how long to run our drifting litter model. For a full explanation see: `https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2022.114388`_ .. _`https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2022.114388`: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0025326X22010700
Spatial information
Coordinate reference system
N/A
Geographic extent
- Latitude from: 47 to 52.5
- Longitude from: -12 to -2
Metadata information
Language
English
Metadata identifier
21a6ae60-8e1b-4c64-a7c2-0108255797e4
Published by
Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquaculture Science
Contact publisher
data.manager@cefas.gov.ukDataset reference dates
Creation date
22 November 2022
Revision date
08 December 2023
Publication date
23 November 2022
Period
- From: 18 April 2018
- To: 18 April 2018
Related datasets
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