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Deep Sea Biology Life under the photic zone Our knowledge of deep-sea systems is recent and incomplete • Not lifeless as thought 200 years ago • Shells first dredged from abyss in 1846 • Challenger expedition, 1873-1876 – Animals from 5500 m • 1967: first quantitative measure of deep sea diversity by Hessler & Sanders • 2006: Venter sampling of microorganisms Microbial diversity in pelagic ecosystems “We estimate there are at least 25,000 different kinds of microbes per litre of seawater,” says Sogin. “But I wouldn't be surprised if it turns out there are 100,000 or more.” What are the questions? • What are the environmental challenges? • What adaptations are expressed? • What influences diversity? • How are ecosystems altered by exploitation? Definitions and limits • “Deep sea” = all environments below the compensation depth (below Photic Zone) • Up to 10,000 m • Water column + Benthic habitats • Some organisms are “depth specialists” but others move > 1,000 m vertically Most important gradients in environment • Source of light switches from ambient to biotic • Pressure increases 1 atmosphere for each 10 m of depth • Density of food for filter feeders declines until collected on and in sediments • Depth of minimum oxygen is at intermediate depths (oxygen minimum) Adaptations to gradient in light • Countershading to reduce silhouette against overhead ambient light • More red pigments or translucent • Bioluminescence (70% of organisms) – signaling (mating & deception) – food location – defensive • More dependence on other sensory modalities Adaptations to decreasing light, cont. • Eye structure – mesopelagic: large relative to body size – bathyal: small eyes or blind Consequences of changing pressure • Difficulties in conducting experiments and observing organisms • How do we know? • Enzyme efficiency can be pressure sensitive – protein stability varies with pressure • Lipid “fluidity” varies with pressure • Calcium carbonate solubility increases with pressure Pressure-dependent growth experiment Patterns in food density • In water column, average amount of biomass declines with depth • At bottom, marine snow accumulates • Average particle size varies, with increasing “patchiness” with depth • EXCEPT for ecosystems that are dominated by chemosynthetic bacteria – vent ecosystems – cold seep ecosystems Deep Sea food sources Consequences of lower food density to organisms (reproductive) • Decreasing densities of populations – consequences for finding mates, sociality • Decreasing availability of food for offspring – migrations to surface waters, or . . . – delayed reproduction & smaller repro effort – more parental care – slow embryological development Example of reproductive migration Consequences of lower food density to organisms (ecological & physiological) • Tendency for smaller body size as depth increases (but reversed for bathyal spp.) • Chemosensory acute to locate patchy food • Large mouths to use wide range of food • Lower metabolic rates (reduced mobility) – but high mobility for bathyal species • Slow growth, but high longevity • How does this influence “sustainable yield”? Deep sea benthos: characteristics • Early sampling limited by technology – Suggested low density – Suggested low diversity • Increasing sampling intensity & with less damage – Low density generally was correct – But High Diversity Deep Sea Benthic diversity • In & on sediments • Dominated by “macrofauna” – Defined by size (> 300 μm but too small to be identified by photographs) – Include polychaetes, molluscs, crustaceans, echinoderms • Estimated to include between 500,000 and 10,000,000 species – Program to inventory under way (CeDAMar or “Census of Diversity of Marine Life”) Ecological importance of macrofauna • Nutrient cycling at ecosystem level • Food resource for commercially important species • Pollutant metabolism • Dispersion & bural • Energy cycling • Influence sediment structure & turnover Why so many species of macrofauna? • Why would we expect low diversity? • Apparently low variety of habitats so apparently low number of different niches • Low rate of input for new energy/nutrients • “Competitive exclusion principle” predicts low diversity What ecological mechanisms would explain high diversity? • H1: Niches are defined by more dimensions than sediment type – Location within sediments (e.g., vary in O2) – Other organisms create “biotic” variation • H2: Competition is not a major factor – Predator influence – Disturbance influence • H3: Local diversity may be low but regional diversity can be high – This is multiplied by a very large area of habitat Sediment variation – “Bioturbation” Variable sediment surface from biological activity: 1100 m Box Core from 1900 m