Submersible- and lander-observed community patterns in the Mariana and New Britain trenches: Influence of productivity and depth on epibenthic and scavenging communities

Deep-sea trenches remain one of the least explored ocean ecosystems due to the unique challenges of sampling at great depths. Five submersible dives conducted using the DEEPSEA CHALLENGER submersible generated video of undisturbed deep-sea communities at bathyal (994m), abyssal (3755m), and hadal (8...

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Veröffentlicht in:Deep-sea research. Part I, Oceanographic research papers Oceanographic research papers, 2015-05, Vol.99, p.119-133
Hauptverfasser: Gallo, Natalya D., James Cameron, Kevin Hardy, Patricia Fryer, Douglas H. Bartlett, Lisa A. Levin
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container_title Deep-sea research. Part I, Oceanographic research papers
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creator Gallo, Natalya D.
James Cameron
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Patricia Fryer
Douglas H. Bartlett
Lisa A. Levin
description Deep-sea trenches remain one of the least explored ocean ecosystems due to the unique challenges of sampling at great depths. Five submersible dives conducted using the DEEPSEA CHALLENGER submersible generated video of undisturbed deep-sea communities at bathyal (994m), abyssal (3755m), and hadal (8228m) depths in the New Britain Trench, bathyal depths near the Ulithi atoll (1192m), and hadal depths in the Mariana Trench Challenger Deep (10908m). The New Britain Trench is overlain by waters with higher net primary productivity (~3-fold) than the Mariana Trench and nearby Ulithi, and receives substantially more allochthonous input from terrestrial sources, based on the presence of terrestrial debris in submersible video footage. Comparisons between trenches addressed how differences in productivity regime influence benthic and demersal deep-sea community structure. In addition, the scavenger community was studied using paired lander deployments to the New Britain (8233m) and Mariana (10918 m) trenches. Differences in allochthonous input were reflected in epibenthic community abundance, biodiversity, and lifestyle representation. More productive locations were characterized by higher faunal abundances (~2-fold) at both bathyal and hadal depths. In contrast, biodiversity trends showed a unimodal pattern with more food-rich areas exhibiting reduced bathyal diversity and elevated hadal diversity. Hadal scavenging communities exhibited similar higher abundance but also ~3-fold higher species richness in the more food-rich New Britain Trench compared to the Mariana Trench. High species- and phylum-level diversity observed in the New Britain Trench suggest that trench environments may foster higher megafaunal biodiversity than surrounding abyssal depths if food is not limiting. However, the absence of fish at our hadal sites suggests that certain groups do have physiological depth limits. Submersible video footage allowed novel in situ observation of holothurian orientation, jellyfish feeding behavior as well as lifestyle preferences for substrate, seafloor and overlying water. This study documents previously unreported species in the New Britain Trench, including an ulmariid scyphozoan (8233m) and an acrocirrid polychaete (994m), and reports the first observation of an abundant population of elpidiid holothurians in the Mariana Trench (10908m). It also provides the first megafaunal community analysis of the world׳s deepest epibenthic community in the Mariana Tren
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Levin</creatorcontrib><title>Submersible- and lander-observed community patterns in the Mariana and New Britain trenches: Influence of productivity and depth on epibenthic and scavenging communities</title><title>Deep-sea research. Part I, Oceanographic research papers</title><description>Deep-sea trenches remain one of the least explored ocean ecosystems due to the unique challenges of sampling at great depths. Five submersible dives conducted using the DEEPSEA CHALLENGER submersible generated video of undisturbed deep-sea communities at bathyal (994m), abyssal (3755m), and hadal (8228m) depths in the New Britain Trench, bathyal depths near the Ulithi atoll (1192m), and hadal depths in the Mariana Trench Challenger Deep (10908m). 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Five submersible dives conducted using the DEEPSEA CHALLENGER submersible generated video of undisturbed deep-sea communities at bathyal (994m), abyssal (3755m), and hadal (8228m) depths in the New Britain Trench, bathyal depths near the Ulithi atoll (1192m), and hadal depths in the Mariana Trench Challenger Deep (10908m). The New Britain Trench is overlain by waters with higher net primary productivity (~3-fold) than the Mariana Trench and nearby Ulithi, and receives substantially more allochthonous input from terrestrial sources, based on the presence of terrestrial debris in submersible video footage. Comparisons between trenches addressed how differences in productivity regime influence benthic and demersal deep-sea community structure. In addition, the scavenger community was studied using paired lander deployments to the New Britain (8233m) and Mariana (10918 m) trenches. Differences in allochthonous input were reflected in epibenthic community abundance, biodiversity, and lifestyle representation. More productive locations were characterized by higher faunal abundances (~2-fold) at both bathyal and hadal depths. In contrast, biodiversity trends showed a unimodal pattern with more food-rich areas exhibiting reduced bathyal diversity and elevated hadal diversity. Hadal scavenging communities exhibited similar higher abundance but also ~3-fold higher species richness in the more food-rich New Britain Trench compared to the Mariana Trench. High species- and phylum-level diversity observed in the New Britain Trench suggest that trench environments may foster higher megafaunal biodiversity than surrounding abyssal depths if food is not limiting. However, the absence of fish at our hadal sites suggests that certain groups do have physiological depth limits. Submersible video footage allowed novel in situ observation of holothurian orientation, jellyfish feeding behavior as well as lifestyle preferences for substrate, seafloor and overlying water. This study documents previously unreported species in the New Britain Trench, including an ulmariid scyphozoan (8233m) and an acrocirrid polychaete (994m), and reports the first observation of an abundant population of elpidiid holothurians in the Mariana Trench (10908m). It also provides the first megafaunal community analysis of the world׳s deepest epibenthic community in the Mariana Trench Challenger Deep, which was composed of elpidiid holothurians, amphipods, and xenophyophores. •DEEPSEA CHALLENGER dives to the New Britain and Mariana Trenches were analyzed.•Allochthonous input influences epibenthic and scavenging community patterns.•Lower abundance and biodiversity occurs in oligotrophic trenches.•High epibenthic and scavenging community diversity is present in the New Britain Trench.•This study is the first megafaunal epibenthic community analysis of the Challenger Deep.</abstract><cop>Oxford</cop><pub>Elsevier Ltd</pub><doi>10.1016/j.dsr.2014.12.012</doi><tpages>15</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Abyssal zones
Baited lander
Benthos
Biodiversity
Biological diversity
Britain
Challenger Deep
Communities
Comparative analysis
Fish
Hadal zone
Human occupied vehicle
Marine
Marine ecology
Megafauna
Oceanography
Productivity
Scavenging
Submersible
Submersibles
Trench ecology
Trenches
title Submersible- and lander-observed community patterns in the Mariana and New Britain trenches: Influence of productivity and depth on epibenthic and scavenging communities
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