Christian Stranne Universitetslektor i maringeofysisk kartering och modellering, Docent

Kontakt

Namn och titel: Christian StranneUniversitetslektor i maringeofysisk kartering och modellering, Docent

Telefon: +4686747835

Arbetsplats: Institutionen för geologiska vetenskaper Länk till annan webbplats.

Besöksadress Rum R 215Svante Arrheniusväg 8 C, Geohuset

Postadress Institutionen för geologiska vetenskaper106 91 Stockholm

Om mig

Christian Stranne disputerade i fysisk oceanografi vid Göteborgs Universitet i november 2012, där han studerade storskalig havsisdynamik i den Arktiska Oceanen och interaktioner mellan hav, havsis och atmosfär. Efter disputationen fick han en tvåårig postdoktjänst vid Institutionen för Geologiska Vetenskaper (IGV) vid Stockholms Universitet, där hans forskning främst fokuserade på flödesdynamik i havssediment som innehåller gashydrater.

År 2015 beviljades Christian en treårig internationell postdoktjänst från Vetenskapsrådet, där han delvis arbetade vid Center for Coastal and Ocean Mapping vid University of New Hampshire i USA. Under denna tid utökade han sin forskning till att även omfatta akustisk geofysik.

I augusti 2018 blev Christian biträdande lektor, och i november samma år tilldelades han ett fyraårigt forskningsprojekt från Vetenskapsrådet med fokus på hur klimatförändringar påverkar metangasutsläpp från havsbottnar. Han befordrades till universitetslektor 2022 och erhöll samma år ett nytt fyraårigt projekt från Vetenskapsrådet med titeln The Fate of Climate Change-Induced Methane Formation in the Sediment-Ocean-Atmosphere System.

Christian har deltagit i sex stora expeditioner med isbrytare till Antarktis och Arktiska Oceanen, samt i flera fältstudier med mindre fartyg i Sverige, Finland, Brasilien och Chile




  • The distribution and abundance of planktonic foraminifera under summer sea ice in the Arctic Ocean

    Artikel
    2025. Flor Vermassen, Clare Bird, Tirza Maria Weitkamp, Kate F. Darling, Hanna Farnelid, Céline Heuzé, Allison Hsiang, Salar Karam, Christian Stranne, Marcus Sundbom, Helen Coxall.

    Planktonic foraminifera are calcifying protists that represent a minor but important part of the pelagic microzooplankton. They are found in all of Earth's ocean basins and are widely studied in sediment records to reconstruct climatic and environmental changes throughout geological time. The Arctic Ocean is currently being transformed in response to modern climate change; however, the effect on planktonic foraminiferal populations is virtually unknown. Here, we provide the first systematic sampling of planktonic foraminifera communities in the "high"Arctic Ocean - defined in this work as areas north of 80° N - specifically in the broad region located between northern Greenland (the Lincoln Sea with its adjoining fjords and the Morris Jesup Rise), the Yermak Plateau, and the North Pole. Stratified depth tows down to 1000 m using a multinet were performed to reveal the species composition and spatial variability in these communities below the summer sea ice. The average abundance in the top 200 m ranged between 15 and 65 individuals m-3 in the central Arctic Ocean and was 0.3 individuals m-3 in the shelf area of the Lincoln Sea. At all stations, except one site at the Yermak Plateau, assemblages consisted solely of the polar specialist Neogloboquadrina pachyderma. It predominated in the top 100 m, where it was likely feeding on phytoplankton below the ice. Near the Yermak Plateau, at the outer edge of the pack ice, rare specimens of Turborotalita quinqueloba occurred that appeared to be associated with the inflowing Atlantic Water layer. Our results would suggest that the anticipated turnover from polar to subpolar planktonic species in the perennially ice-covered part of the central Arctic Ocean has not yet occurred, in agreement with a recent meta-analysis from the Fram Strait which suggested that the increased export of sea ice is blocking the influx of Atlantic-sourced species. The presented data set will be a valuable reference for continued monitoring of the abundance and composition of planktonic foraminifera communities as they respond to the ongoing sea-ice decline and the "Atlantification"of the Arctic Ocean basin. Additionally, the results can be used to assist paleoceanographic interpretations, based on sedimented foraminifera assemblages.

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  • Ebullition dominates methane emissions in stratified coastal waters

    Artikel
    2024. Martijn Hermans, Christian Stranne, Elias Broman, Alexander Sokolov, Florian Roth, Francisco J. A. Nascimento, Carl-Magnus Mörth, Sophie ten Hietbrink, Xiaole Sun, Erik Gustafsson, Bo Gustafsson, Alf Norkko, Tom Jilbert, Christoph Humborg.

    Coastal areas are an important source of methane (CH4). However, the exact origins of CH4 in the surface waters of coastal regions, which in turn drive sea-air emissions, remain uncertain. To gain a comprehensive understanding of the current and future climate change feedbacks, it is crucial to identify these CH4 sources and processes that regulate its formation and oxidation. This study investigated coastal CH4 dynamics by comparing water column data from six stations located in the brackish Tvärminne Archipelago, Baltic Sea. The sediment biogeochemistry and microbiology were further investigated at two stations (i.e., nearshore and offshore). These stations differed in terms of stratification, bottom water redox conditions, and organic matter loading. At the nearshore station, CH4 diffusion from the sediment into the water column was negligible, because nearly all CH4 was oxidized within the upper sediment column before reaching the sediment surface. On the other hand, at the offshore station, there was significant benthic diffusion of CH4, albeit the majority underwent oxidation before reaching the sediment-water interface, due to shoaling of the sulfate methane transition zone (SMTZ). The potential contribution of CH4 production in the water column was evaluated and was found to be negligible. After examining the isotopic signatures of δ13C-CH4 across the sediment and water column, it became apparent that the surface water δ13C-CH4 values observed in areas with thermal stratification could not be explained by diffusion, advective fluxes, nor production in the water column. In fact, these values bore a remarkable resemblance to those detected below the SMTZ. This supports the hypothesis that the source of CH4 in surface waters is more likely to originate from ebullition than diffusion in stratified brackish coastal systems.

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  • Eutrophication and Deoxygenation Drive High Methane Emissions from a Brackish Coastal System

    Artikel
    2024. Olga M. Żygadłowska, Florian Roth, Niels A. G. M. van Helmond, Wytze K. Lenstra, Jessica Venetz, Nicky Dotsios, Thomas Röckmann, Annelies J. Veraart, Christian Stranne, Christoph Humborg, Mike S. M. Jetten, Caroline P. Slomp.

    Coastal environments are a major source of marine methane in the atmosphere. Eutrophication and deoxygenation have the potential to amplify the coastal methane emissions. Here, we investigate methane dynamics in the eutrophic Stockholm Archipelago. We cover a range of sites with contrasting water column redox conditions and rates of organic matter degradation, with the latter reflected by the depth of the sulfate–methane transition zone (SMTZ) in the sediment. We find the highest benthic release of methane (2.2–8.6 mmol m–2 d–1) at sites where the SMTZ is located close to the sediment–water interface (2–10 cm). A large proportion of methane is removed in the water column via aerobic or anaerobic microbial pathways. At many locations, water column methane is highly depleted in 13C, pointing toward substantial bubble dissolution. Calculated and measured rates of methane release to the atmosphere range from 0.03 to 0.4 mmol m–2 d–1 and from 0.1 to 1.7 mmol m–2 d–1, respectively, with the highest fluxes at locations with a shallow SMTZ and anoxic and sulfidic bottom waters. Taken together, our results show that sites suffering most from both eutrophication and deoxygenation are hotspots of coastal marine methane emissions.

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  • Hidden seafloor hypoxia in coastal waters

    Artikel
    2024. Jonas Fredriksson, Karl Attard, Christian Stranne, Inga Koszalka, Ronnie N. Glud, Thorbjørn Joest Andersen, Christoph Humborg, Volker Brüchert.

    The expansion of transient and permanent coastal benthic anoxia is one of the most severe problems for the coastal ocean globally. We report frequent, hidden hypoxia in the bottom 5 cm of the water column of a coastal site in the central Baltic Sea by continuous high-resolution profiling of oxygen (O2) directly above the sediment surface. This hypoxia stood in stark contrast to 30-yr O2 monitoring records at this site that suggest apparent continuous well-oxygenated conditions. In situ measurements showed highly dynamic conditions in the bottom 30 cm recording frequent gradual and abrupt changes between normoxic (> 63 μmol L−1) and hypoxic (< 63 μmol L−1) conditions that would remain undetectable by conventional bottom water O2 monitoring. The temporal variability of these “hidden” hypoxia is tied to the dynamic current field and to changes in O2 consumption following resuspension events. Our observations suggest that transient benthic hypoxia is much more common than routine monitoring data indicate.

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  • Investigation of submarine groundwater discharge into the Baltic Sea through varved glacial clays

    Artikel
    2024. Nai-Chen Chen, Matt O'Regan, Wei-Li Hong, Thomas Andrén, Valentí Rodellas, Florian Roth, Carl-Magnus Mörth, Carl Regnéll, Hanna Sofia Marxen, Sophie ten Hietbrink, Tzu-Hao Huang, Richard Gyllencreautz, Christian Stranne, Anna Linderholm, Jordi Garcia-Orellana, Christoph Humborg, Martin Jakobsson.

    Submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) is an important process responsible for transporting terrestrial dissolved chemical substances into the coastal ocean, thereby impacting the marine ecosystem. Despites its significance, there are few studies addressing SGD in the northern Baltic Sea. Here we investigate the potential occurrence of SGD in an area characterized by seafloor terraces formed in varved glacial clay located around Fifång Island, Southern Stockholm Archipelago. We analyzed 222Rn activity and porewater geochemistry in both marine and terrestrial sediment cores retrieved from Fifång Island and its surrounding offshore areas. Results from 222Rn mass-balance calculations, water isotopes, salinity, chloride concentration, and dating (including 14C and helium-tritium dating) indicate that modern groundwater flows through varved glacial clay layers and fractured rocks on Fifång Island and discharges into Fifång Bay. Additionally, the offshore cores reveal a saline groundwater source that, dating of the dissolved inorganic carbon, appears systematically younger than the hosting clay varves dated using the Swedish clay varve chronology. Acoustic blanking in our acquired sub-bottom profiles may be related to this fluid migration. The occurrence of this saline groundwater seems to be independent from the distance to the submarine terraces. Collectively, our study confirms the occurrence of submarine groundwater in the varved glacial clay close to Fifång Island and further offshore. Our findings help establish the significance of submarine groundwater discharge in influencing the past and present coastal environment in the Baltic Sea region.

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Effekten av glacial avsmältning på fjordsystemen i östra Grönland

Klimatförändringar snabbar på glaciärsmältning, vilket frigör metan och kol till haven. Detta leder till CO₂-utsläpp genom mineralisering, vilket bidrar till försurning och växthusgaser. För att förutse effekterna på havskemins behöver vi grunddata om materialets öde.

Ryder Glacier Expedition 2019

Ryder 2019 expedition med isbrytaren Oden riktar sig mot den outforskade marinriket Ryder Glacier, närmare bestämt Sherard Osborne Fjord och angränsande område i norra Nares sund och södra Lincoln Sea.

Kontakt

Namn och titel: Christian StranneUniversitetslektor i maringeofysisk kartering och modellering, Docent

Telefon: +4686747835

Arbetsplats: Institutionen för geologiska vetenskaper Länk till annan webbplats.

Besöksadress Rum R 215Svante Arrheniusväg 8 C, Geohuset

Postadress Institutionen för geologiska vetenskaper106 91 Stockholm