Faunal communities at sites of gas- and oil-bearing fluids in Lake Baikal

Macro- and meiofaunal communities were examined at four geomorphologically distinct sites with different gas- and oil-bearing fluid characteristics in the northern, central and southern basins of Lake Baikal. All sites had elevated concentrations of bicarbonate, nitrate, sulphate and chloride ions i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geo-marine letters 2012-12, Vol.32 (5-6), p.437-451
Hauptverfasser: Zemskaya, Tamara I., Sitnikova, Tatiana Y., Kiyashko, Sergei I., Kalmychkov, Gennady V., Pogodaeva, Tatiana V., Mekhanikova, Irina V., Naumova, Tatiana V., Shubenkova, Olga V., Chernitsina, Svetlana M., Kotsar, Oleg V., Chernyaev, Evgeny S., Khlystov, Oleg M.
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container_end_page 451
container_issue 5-6
container_start_page 437
container_title Geo-marine letters
container_volume 32
creator Zemskaya, Tamara I.
Sitnikova, Tatiana Y.
Kiyashko, Sergei I.
Kalmychkov, Gennady V.
Pogodaeva, Tatiana V.
Mekhanikova, Irina V.
Naumova, Tatiana V.
Shubenkova, Olga V.
Chernitsina, Svetlana M.
Kotsar, Oleg V.
Chernyaev, Evgeny S.
Khlystov, Oleg M.
description Macro- and meiofaunal communities were examined at four geomorphologically distinct sites with different gas- and oil-bearing fluid characteristics in the northern, central and southern basins of Lake Baikal. All sites had elevated concentrations of bicarbonate, nitrate, sulphate and chloride ions in pore fluids, with highest values at the Frolikha vent. Elevated levels of iron ions were found in pore waters of the St. Petersburg methane seep and the Gorevoy Utes oil seep. The chemical composition of pore waters at the Malenky mud volcano was similar to that reported in earlier work. Consistent with published data, the Frolikha vent (northern basin) and the St. Petersburg methane seep (central basin) were characterised by methane of mixed genesis (thermogenic + biogenic), whereas the methane source was mainly thermogenic at the Gorevoy Utes oil seep (central basin) and biogenic at the Malenky mud volcano (southern basin). In contrast to marine seep ecosystems, the macrofauna was dominated only by amphipods, giant planarians and oligochaetes, whereas bivalves were absent; the meiofauna was similar to its marine counterpart, being dominated by nematodes, cyclops, harpacticoids and ostracods. A statistically significant positive relationship was revealed between faunal abundance and the availability of bacterial mats on seep sediments. Moreover, ANOVA tests showed significant increases in both meiozoobenthic and macrozoobenthic densities at “hot spot” vent/seep sites relative to discharge-free reference sites. The isotopic composition of carbon and nitrogen at various trophic levels of these benthic vent/seep communities was found to differ markedly from that reported by earlier studies for the pelagic and other benthic food webs in Lake Baikal. As in marine seeps, the macrofauna had variable isotopic signatures. Light δ 13 C and δ 15 N values suggest the utilization of chemosynthetically fixed and/or methane-derived organic matter. By contrast, the heavy δ 13 C signatures of some mobile amphipods likely reflect consumption of photosynthetically derived carbon. These findings would at least partly explain why Lake Baikal is a notable outlier in global temperature–biodiversity patterns, exhibiting the highest biodiversity of any lake worldwide but at an extremely cold average temperature.
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All sites had elevated concentrations of bicarbonate, nitrate, sulphate and chloride ions in pore fluids, with highest values at the Frolikha vent. Elevated levels of iron ions were found in pore waters of the St. Petersburg methane seep and the Gorevoy Utes oil seep. The chemical composition of pore waters at the Malenky mud volcano was similar to that reported in earlier work. Consistent with published data, the Frolikha vent (northern basin) and the St. Petersburg methane seep (central basin) were characterised by methane of mixed genesis (thermogenic + biogenic), whereas the methane source was mainly thermogenic at the Gorevoy Utes oil seep (central basin) and biogenic at the Malenky mud volcano (southern basin). In contrast to marine seep ecosystems, the macrofauna was dominated only by amphipods, giant planarians and oligochaetes, whereas bivalves were absent; the meiofauna was similar to its marine counterpart, being dominated by nematodes, cyclops, harpacticoids and ostracods. A statistically significant positive relationship was revealed between faunal abundance and the availability of bacterial mats on seep sediments. Moreover, ANOVA tests showed significant increases in both meiozoobenthic and macrozoobenthic densities at “hot spot” vent/seep sites relative to discharge-free reference sites. The isotopic composition of carbon and nitrogen at various trophic levels of these benthic vent/seep communities was found to differ markedly from that reported by earlier studies for the pelagic and other benthic food webs in Lake Baikal. As in marine seeps, the macrofauna had variable isotopic signatures. Light δ 13 C and δ 15 N values suggest the utilization of chemosynthetically fixed and/or methane-derived organic matter. By contrast, the heavy δ 13 C signatures of some mobile amphipods likely reflect consumption of photosynthetically derived carbon. These findings would at least partly explain why Lake Baikal is a notable outlier in global temperature–biodiversity patterns, exhibiting the highest biodiversity of any lake worldwide but at an extremely cold average temperature.</abstract><cop>Berlin/Heidelberg</cop><pub>Springer Berlin Heidelberg</pub><doi>10.1007/s00367-012-0297-8</doi><tpages>15</tpages></addata></record>
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source Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Aquatic life
Biodiversity
Earth and Environmental Science
Earth Sciences
Food webs
Geology
Global temperatures
Ions
Lakes
Limnology
Macrofauna
Marine
Marine ecosystems
Marine sediments
Methane
Mollusks
Natural gas
Organic matter
Original
Shellfish
Trophic levels
Variance analysis
Volcanoes
title Faunal communities at sites of gas- and oil-bearing fluids in Lake Baikal
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