Animal life in the shallow subseafloor crust at deep-sea hydrothermal vents

It was once believed that only microbes and viruses inhabited the subseafloor crust beneath hydrothermal vents. Yet, on the seafloor, animals like the giant tubeworm Riftia pachyptila thrive. Their larvae are thought to disperse in the water column, despite never being observed there. We hypothesize...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-10, Vol.15 (1), p.8466-9, Article 8466
Hauptverfasser: Bright, Monika, Gollner, Sabine, de Oliveira, André Luiz, Espada-Hinojosa, Salvador, Fulford, Avery, Hughes, Ian Vincent, Hourdez, Stephane, Karthäuser, Clarissa, Kolar, Ingrid, Krause, Nicole, Le Layec, Victor, Makovec, Tihomir, Messora, Alessandro, Mitchell, Jessica, Pröts, Philipp, Rodríguez-Ramírez, Ivonne, Sieler, Fanny, Sievert, Stefan M., Steger, Jan, Tinta, Tinkara, Winter, Teresa Rosa Maria, Bright, Zach, Coffield, Russel, Hill, Carl, Ingram, Kris, Paris, Alex
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:It was once believed that only microbes and viruses inhabited the subseafloor crust beneath hydrothermal vents. Yet, on the seafloor, animals like the giant tubeworm Riftia pachyptila thrive. Their larvae are thought to disperse in the water column, despite never being observed there. We hypothesized that these larvae travel through the subseafloor via vent fluids. In our exploration, lifting lobate lava shelves revealed adult tubeworms and other vent animals in subseafloor cavities. The discovery of vent endemic animals below the visible seafloor shows that the seafloor and subseafloor faunal communities are connected. The presence of adult tubeworms suggests larval dispersal through the recharge zone of the hydrothermal circulation system. Given that many of these animals are host to dense bacterial communities that oxidize reduced chemicals and fix carbon, the extension of animal habitats into the subseafloor has implications for local and regional geochemical flux measurements. These findings underscore the need for protecting vents, as the extent of these habitats has yet to be fully ascertained. Microbes and viruses inhabit the subseafloor crust beneath hydrothermal vents. Here the authors show that vent endemic animals such as giant tubeworms also live in vent subseafloor cavities, implicating subseafloor dispersal of vent larvae and the need to protect seafloor and subseafloor vent habitats.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-52631-9