European expedition explores coastal ecosystems at the molecular level
A large expedition has arrived at Askö. For 1,5 years, the Traversing European Coastlines Expedition travels along Europe's coasts, stopping at selected sites to sample air, land and sea water.
It's early morning and the sea and land teams from the gigantic Traversing European Coastlines project (TREC) are waking up in their cabins on board Electra af Askö, Stockholm University's research vessel based at the Askö Laboratory in the Trosa archipelago.
The expedition started at the end of March in Brittany, and has since travelled along the coasts of France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Poland, the Baltic States and Finland. Now it has come to Sweden and Askö, and a long day of sampling along transects from the sea and into the coastal forest awaits.
Collaboration with research stations
The expedition is a gigantic pan-European project, led by the European Molecular Biology Laboratory, headquartered in Heidelberg, Germany, in collaboration with a large number of marine research stations across Europe. It just arrived from Askö's sister station at the mouth of the Gulf of Finland – Tvärminne Zoological Station, via Åbo Akademi University. After the stop at Askö, it will continue to Kristineberg Center on the Swedish west coast. From there the journey continues to Norway, Great Britain and Ireland and down along the Bay of Biscay and the Atlantic coast to Cádiz in southern Spain. Next year, the expedition will continue to the Mediterranean.

Biodiversity and environmental status
In total, there will be some 30 stops along Europe's coasts to sample at more than 120 land-sea transects. The samples are then used for a variety of analyses, both of biodiversity, in particular at the microbial level, and of various environmental parameters affecting the coastal ecosystems. By analysing the presence of different molecules, researchers will be able to see what processes are taking place in the ecosystems.
In addition to samples for sequencing all DNA and identifying species by microscopy, samples are collected to analyse the amount of chlorophyll and organic carbon, and the presence of various organic pollutants and metals. For the shallow water samples alone, 18 different protocols are followed to obtain samples for different analyses, each of which can reveal specific aspects of the ecosystem.
Omics
One of the methods used is meta-barcoding, which means identifying all the species present in a soil or water sample by analysing all the DNA in the sample, looking for short genetic markers from the genome of different organisms. It includes both DNA from whole small organisms present in the sample, and from larger organisms that have left traces at the site.


The technology is developing rapidly and it is now possible to map biodiversity on a large scale from samples taken in the wild. The TREC Expedition is largely an omics project, where omics is a collective term for several recently developed methods to study DNA, RNA, proteins and metabolites (substances formed during an organism's metabolism).
Mobile laboratories
It is a demanding logistic task to get all researchers, technicians and equipment to the different sampling locations and then prepare, store and send all the hundreds of samples from each site to advanced laboratories for analysis. The expedition scientists travel in vans that they have converted into small field laboratories, with filters, pumps, ovens, refrigerators and freezers to prepare and store the samples. In parallel, the boat Tara sails along the coast and samples the sea at deeper waters.

At Askö, the head of Askö Laboratory Eva Lindell and the Stockholm University Baltic Sea Centre's scientific leader Christoph Humborg help with all the practicalities and to select suitable sampling sites.
Today’s samples will be taken in Hästdammsviken on the eastern side of Askö. All the equipment is loaded onto the trailer of a four-wheeler and driven as close as possible, then carried by hand and on small trailers out to the reeds in the bay and into the neighbouring forest. The sea team puts on waders or dry suits, while the land team starts by installing a vacuum pump and a particle counter for the air samples.
A long day of sampling lies ahead, and the researchers are grateful for the absence of tides in the Baltic Sea, which complicate sampling along other parts of Europe's coasts.


Coastal ecosystem health
– The TREC Expedition provides baseline data on the health status of various types of coastal ecosystems across Europe. That is of great interest to us at the Baltic Sea Centre in our climate research, where we investigate the carbon sequestration capacity of different coastal ecosystems. The expedition will provide baseline data both from here and many other coasts around Europe that we can compare with our own data, says Professor Christoph Humborg.
Text: Michaela Lundell
Last updated: August 3, 2023
Source: Baltic Sea Centre