Carbonate compensation depth drives abyssal biogeography in the northeast Pacific

Abyssal seafloor communities cover more than 60% of Earth’s surface. Despite their great size, abyssal plains extend across modest environmental gradients compared to other marine ecosystems. However, little is known about the patterns and processes regulating biodiversity or potentially delimiting...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature ecology & evolution 2023-09, Vol.7 (9), p.1388-1397
Hauptverfasser: Simon-Lledó, Erik, Amon, Diva J., Bribiesca‐Contreras, Guadalupe, Cuvelier, Daphne, Durden, Jennifer M., Ramalho, Sofia P., Uhlenkott, Katja, Arbizu, Pedro Martinez, Benoist, Noëlie, Copley, Jonathan, Dahlgren, Thomas G., Glover, Adrian G., Fleming, Bethany, Horton, Tammy, Ju, Se-Jong, Mejía-Saenz, Alejandra, McQuaid, Kirsty, Pape, Ellen, Park, Chailinn, Smith, Craig R., Jones, Daniel O. B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abyssal seafloor communities cover more than 60% of Earth’s surface. Despite their great size, abyssal plains extend across modest environmental gradients compared to other marine ecosystems. However, little is known about the patterns and processes regulating biodiversity or potentially delimiting biogeographical boundaries at regional scales in the abyss. Improved macroecological understanding of remote abyssal environments is urgent as threats of widespread anthropogenic disturbance grow in the deep ocean. Here, we use a new, basin-scale dataset to show the existence of clear regional zonation in abyssal communities across the 5,000 km span of the Clarion–Clipperton Zone (northeast Pacific), an area targeted for deep-sea mining. We found two pronounced biogeographic provinces, deep and shallow-abyssal, separated by a transition zone between 4,300 and 4,800 m depth. Surprisingly, species richness was maintained across this boundary by phylum-level taxonomic replacements. These regional transitions are probably related to calcium carbonate saturation boundaries as taxa dependent on calcium carbonate structures, such as shelled molluscs, appear restricted to the shallower province. Our results suggest geochemical and climatic forcing on distributions of abyssal populations over large spatial scales and provide a potential paradigm for deep-sea macroecology, opening a new basis for regional-scale biodiversity research and conservation strategies in Earth’s largest biome. Analysing seabed imagery data spanning 5,000 km and >50,000 megafaunal specimens across the Clarion–Clipperton Zone abyssal plain in the northeast Pacific, the authors identify two distinct biogeographical provinces in which taxa that are dependent on calcium carbonate structures are restricted to depths above 4,300–4,880 m.
ISSN:2397-334X
2397-334X
DOI:10.1038/s41559-023-02122-9