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16 From the Continental Shelf to the Deep Sea Notes for Marine Biology: Function, Biodiversity, Ecology By Jeffrey S. Levinton SAMPLING AND OBSERVING THE SEA BED Anchor dredge: digs to a specified depth Peterson Grab Box Corer Alvin from WHOI Video camera Grabbing arm The Ventana, MBARI Remote Operated Vehicle - ROV The Shelf-Deep Sea Gradient • Supply of nutrient-rich particulates to open ocean deep sea is low: Distance from shore Depth and time of travel of material from surface to bottom(decomposition) Low primary production over remote deep sea bottoms BOTTOM LINE: Input to open ocean bottom is low. Exceptions: trenches, near continents Global particulate C – SEAWIFS satellite image Depth, distance from continental margin, low productivity in open sea Input of organic matter • Input of organic matter from water column declines with depth and distance from shore: continental shelf sediment organic matter = 2-5%, open ocean sediment organic matter = 0.5 - 1.5%, open ocean abyssal bottoms beneath gyre centers < 0.25% Microbial Activity on Seabed • Sinking of the Alvin and lunch. • Mechanism - not so clear. High pressure effect on decomposition (depth over 1000m) or perhaps low rates of microbial activity in deep sea. Microbial Activity on Seabed 2 • Deep-sea bottom oxygen consumption 100-fold less than at shelf depths • Bacterial substrates such as agar labeled with radioactive carbon are taken up by bacteria at a rate of 2 percent of uptake rate on shelf bottoms • Animal activity is more complex. Deep sea benthic biomass is very low, some benthic fishes are poor in muscle mass - others are efficient predators and attack bait presented experimentally in bait buckets. Also some special environments with high nutrients (more later) Deep-Sea Bacteria • Known to be barophilic • Have reduced respiration rates and reduced conversions of substrates in heterotrophy • Genetically different from shallow water strains Global particulate C – SEAWIFS satellite image Depth, distance from continental margin, low productivity in open sea IS THE DEEP SEA IN SLO-MO? Low input Low microbial activity Low biomass Inactive species (e.g., fish) Hot Vents - Deep Sea Trophic Islands • Hot Vents - sites usually on oceanic ridges where hot water emerges from vents, associated with volcanic activity • Sulfide emerges from vents, which supports large numbers of sulfide-oxidizing bacteria, which in turn support large scale animal community. Most animals live in cooler water just adjacent to hot vent source • Examples: Vestimentifera (Annelid), bivalves – endosymbiotic bacteria; galatheid crabs feed directly on bacterial mats Sulfide life style – two flavors • Direct consumption of sulfide processing bacteria – grazing molluscs, crabs- bacteria on rock surfaces • Intracellular symbioses – bacteria on and intracellular in gills of bivalves, in vestimentiferan worms – specialized hemoglobin binds to sulfide Vestimentiferan tube worms at a hot vent Galatheid crab Vestimentiferan tube worms at a hot vent Courtesy Richard Lutz Vestimentiferan worms, zoarcid fish Vestimentiferan worms, zoarcid fish Population of hot-vent bivalve Calyptogena magnifica Cold Seeps - Other Deep Sea Trophic Islands • Deep sea escarpments may be sites for leaking of high concentrations of hydrocarbons • These sites also have sulfide based trophic system with other bivalve and vestimentiferan species that depend upon sulfur bacterial symbionts Whale carcasses! • Fallen whale carcass – scavengers, decomposition, and then….. http://extrememarine.org.uk/ Sulfide symbionts in boneworms!! Osedax frankpressi – boneworm – has endosymbiotic sulfide oxidizing bacteria, worm body grows into bone, this species has dwarf males Conclusion • Deep sea can have very fast growth and activity IF there is a nutritive source • “nutritive islands” include hot vents, cold seeps, large carcasses that fall to the deep sea bed, even hunks of wood Deep Water Coral Mounds • On deep sea mounts • Domination by corals, often > 500 y old colonies • Diverse species live with corals • Very endangered because of associated deep water fish of commercial interest like orange roughy FIG. 16.16 The deep-water coral Lophelia pertusa with squat lobster and sea urchin. (Photograph by Steve W. Ross and others) Marine Biology: Function, Biodiversity, Ecology, 4/e Levinton Copyright © 2014 by Oxford University Press FIG. 16.17 Some organisms found on deep-sea coral mounds. (a) Large antipatharian coral (probably Leiopathes) on a northeast Atlantic carbonate mound. (Image courtesy of AWI & I. Fremer) (b) These examples show fauna from a giant carbonate mound in the northeast Atlantic: (1) isopod Natatolana borealis, (2) gastropod Boreotrophon clavatus, (3) brachiopod Macandrevia cranium, (4) hydrocoral Pliobothrus symmeticus. (Images courtesy of L. A. Henry, Scottish Association for Marine Science) Marine Biology: Function, Biodiversity, Ecology, 4/e Levinton Copyright © 2014 by Oxford University Press Deep-sea biodiversity changes • Problem with sampling, great depths make it difficult to recover benthic samples • Sanders and Hessler established transect from Gay Head (Martha’s Vineyard, Island, near Cape Cod) to Bermuda • Used bottom sampler with closing device • Found that muddy deep-sea floor biodiversity was very high, in contrast to previous idea of low species numbers • Concluded that deep sea is very diverse Deep-sea biodiversity changes • Problem with sampling: Number of species recovered Correction for sample size - Rarefaction Number of individuals collected 2 Deep-sea biodiversity changes • Problem with sampling: Number of species recovered Correction for sample size - Rarefaction Number of individuals collected 2 Deep-sea biodiversity changes 3 • Results: Number of species in deep sea soft bottoms increases to maximum at 1500 - 2000 m depth, then decreases with increasing depth to 4000m on abyssal bottoms • In remote abyssal bottoms, diversity declines and carnivorous animals are conspicuously less frequent (low population sizes of potential prey species) Deep-sea biodiversity changes 4 Deep-sea biodiversity changes. Why? • Environmental stability hypothesis – species accumulate in stable environment, less extinction • Population size effect - explains decline in abyss -carnivores? • Possible greater age of the deep sea, • Particle size diversity greater at depths of ca. 1500m – might cause higher diversity Environmental stability in the deep sea Shelf waters less physically constant than deep waters Seasonal variation in bottom-water temperature at different depths The End Have a nice summer!! Final Thursday, May 12 here at 1115 AM