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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-03-11
    Description: We used environmental niche modelling along with the best available species occurrence data and environmental parameters to model habitat suitability for key cold-water coral and commercially important deep-sea fish species under present-day (1951-2000) environmental conditions and to forecast changes under severe, high emissions future (2081-2100) climate projections (RCP8.5 scenario) for the North Atlantic Ocean (from 18°N to 76°N and 36°E to 98°W). The VME indicator taxa included Lophelia pertusa , Madrepora oculata, Desmophyllum dianthus, Acanela arbuscula, Acanthogorgia armata, and Paragorgia arborea. The six deep-sea fish species selected were: Coryphaenoides rupestris, Gadus morhua, blackbelly Helicolenus dactylopterus, Hippoglossoides platessoides, Reinhardtius hippoglossoides, and Sebastes mentella. We used an ensemble modelling approach employing three widely-used modelling methods: the Maxent maximum entropy model, Generalized Additive Models, and Random Forest. This dataset contains: 1) Predicted habitat suitability index under present-day (1951-2000) and future (2081-2100; RCP8.5) environmental conditions for twelve deep-sea species in the North Atlantic Ocean, using an ensemble modelling approach.  2) Climate-induced changes in the suitable habitat of twelve deep-sea species in the North Atlantic Ocean, as determined by binary maps built with an ensemble modelling approach and the 10-percentile training presence logistic (10th percentile) threshold. 3) Forecasted present-day suitable habitat loss (value=-1), gain (value=1), and acting as climate refugia (value=2) areas under future (2081-2100; RCP8.5) environmental conditions for twelve deep-sea species in the North Atlantic Ocean. Areas were identified from binary maps built with an ensemble modelling approach and two thresholds: 10-percentile training presence logistic threshold (10th percentile) and maximum sensitivity and specificity (MSS). Refugia areas are those areas predicted as suitable both under present-day and future conditions. All predictions were projected with the Albers equal-area conical projection centred in the middle of the study area. The grid cell resolution is of 3x3 km.
    Keywords: ATLAS; A Trans-Atlantic assessment and deep-water ecosystem-based spatial management plan for Europe; Climate change; cold-water corals; Deep-sea; File format; File name; File size; fisheries; fishes; habitat suitability modelling; octocorals; scleractinians; species distribution models; Uniform resource locator/link to file; vulnerable marine ecosystems
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 384 data points
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-05-07
    Keywords: alpha diversity; Arctic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean; benthic invertebrates; biodiversity conservation; Canada_I; energy-diversity relationship; marine protected area; Pacific Ocean; productivity-diversity relationship; seafloor biodiversity
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet, 3.5 MBytes
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-05-07
    Description: This dataset contain abundance data from Canadian Pacific, Arctic, and Atlantic Oceans from the intertidal zone to upper bathyal depths, encompassing 13 marine ecoregions. 35 benthic datasets that encompass 3,337 taxa (70% identified to species and 21% to genus) from 13,172 samples spanning 6,117 sites. Abiotic data from these ecoregions includes lat long, depth, latitude, chemical energy (export particulate organic carbon [POC] flux), thermal energy (bottom temperature), and seasonality of primary production on the benthic biodiversity.
    Keywords: alpha diversity; Arctic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean; benthic invertebrates; biodiversity conservation; Canada_I; energy-diversity relationship; marine protected area; Pacific Ocean; productivity-diversity relationship; seafloor biodiversity
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 6 datasets
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-05-07
    Keywords: alpha diversity; Arctic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean; benthic invertebrates; biodiversity conservation; Bottom water temperature; Canada_I; Carbon, organic, particulate, flux; DEPTH, water; Depth of the euphotic zone; Ecoregion; energy-diversity relationship; Gear; Identification; Index; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; marine protected area; Net primary production of carbon; Pacific Ocean; productivity-diversity relationship; Province; Realm; Sample amount; seafloor biodiversity
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 72675 data points
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-05-07
    Keywords: alpha diversity; Arctic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean; benthic invertebrates; biodiversity conservation; Canada_I; Class; Code; Coverage; DEPTH, water; energy-diversity relationship; Family; Genus; Identification; Kingdom; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; marine protected area; Order; Pacific Ocean; Phylum; productivity-diversity relationship; Sample amount; seafloor biodiversity; Species
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 7008 data points
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-05-07
    Keywords: alpha diversity; Arctic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean; benthic invertebrates; biodiversity conservation; Canada_I; Class; Code; DEPTH, water; energy-diversity relationship; Family; Genus; Identification; Kingdom; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; marine protected area; Order; Pacific Ocean; Phylum; Presence/absence; productivity-diversity relationship; Sample amount; seafloor biodiversity; Species
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 335712 data points
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-05-07
    Keywords: alpha diversity; Arctic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean; benthic invertebrates; biodiversity conservation; Canada_I; Class; Code; Counts; DEPTH, water; energy-diversity relationship; Family; Genus; Identification; Kingdom; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; marine protected area; Order; Pacific Ocean; Phylum; productivity-diversity relationship; Sample amount; seafloor biodiversity; Species
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 391632 data points
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-05-07
    Keywords: alpha diversity; Arctic Ocean; Atlantic Ocean; benthic invertebrates; biodiversity conservation; Canada_I; Class; Code; Density; DEPTH, water; energy-diversity relationship; Family; Genus; Identification; Kingdom; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; marine protected area; Order; Pacific Ocean; Phylum; productivity-diversity relationship; Sample amount; seafloor biodiversity; Species
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 83562 data points
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: Benthic fauna refers to all fauna that live in or on the seafloor, which researchers typically divide into size classes meiobenthos (32/64 µm–0.5/1 mm), macrobenthos (250 µm–1 cm), and megabenthos (〉1 cm). Benthic fauna play important roles in bioturbation activity, mineralization of organic matter, and in marine food webs. Evaluating their role in these ecosystem functions requires knowledge of their global distribution and biomass. We therefore established the BenBioDen database, the largest open-access database for marine benthic biomass and density data compiled so far. In total, it includes 11,792 georeferenced benthic biomass and 51,559 benthic density records from 384 and 600 studies, respectively. We selected all references following the procedure for systematic reviews and meta-analyses, and report biomass records as grams of wet mass, dry mass, or ash-free dry mass, or carbon per m2 and as abundance records as individuals per m2. This database provides a point of reference for future studies on the distribution and biomass of benthic fauna.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 10
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    Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution January 1993
    Description: Although the association between soft-sediment invertebrates and a specific sediment type has been documented for many habitats, most studies have been correlative and have failed to convincingly demonstrate any single mechanism to explain this association. Sediment type has generally been characterized by grain size, however, many other potential causal factors correlate with grain size, including organic content, microbial content, stability, food supply, and larval supply. One hypothesis for animal-sediment associations is that settling larvae are transported as passive particles and are sorted into different sedimentary habitats much like sediment grains. To test the hypothesis that near-bed hydrodynamics may modify larval settlement, field and flume experiments were conducted where larval settlement was compared between microdepositional environments (small depressions) and non-trapping environments (flush treatments). Depressions have been observed to trap passive particles, and these experiments were therefore designed to test whether settling larvae would be trapped in depressions like passive particles. Flume flow simulations were carried out with the polychaete Capitella sp. I and the bivalve Mulinia latera/is. Experiments with flush and depression sediment treatments were conducted in the absence of the potentially confounding effects of suspended sediment and organic matter and therefore offered a highly controlled, explicit test of passive hydrodynamic deposition of larvae in depressions. Although larvae of both species were generally able to actively select a high-organic sediment over a low-organic alternative with a comparable grain size, elevated densities of both species were observed in depressions for a given sediment treatment. Thus, both species appeared to be vulnerable to hydrodynamic trapping. M. latera/is larvae, however, often made a "poor choice" by settling in high numbers in depressions containing the low-organic sediment while Capitella sp. I larvae were generally able to "escape" from depressions if the sediment was unsuitable. In field experiments carried out at Station R in Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, significantly higher densities of Mediomastus ambiseta juveniles, spionid polychaete juveniles, bivalves, gastropod larvae, and nemerteans were observed in depressions compared with flush treatments over 5 relatively short experimental periods (3 or 4 days each) during the summer of 1990. Of the abundant taxa, only Capitella spp. was not significantly more abundant in depressions compared with flush treatments, although numbers tended to be higher in depressions. Experiments were conducted over a short time period to minimize potential biological interactions between taxa and reduce the likelihood that organic material would accumulate in depressions and provide a cue for settling larvae. Thus, higher numbers in depressions suggest that larvae were passively entrained. These flume and field experiments suggest that near-bed hydrodynamics may modify settlement at some scales, and that both active and passive processes may operate in determining larval distributions in shallow-water, muddy habitats. In deep-sea ecosystems, the role of near-bed hydrodynamics is also of interest because of the potential role that larval settlement in organic patches may play in maintaining the immense species diversity characteristic of many deep-sea ecosystems. To try to understand the role of organic patches in deep-sea communities, several investigators have used colonization trays containing sediments that have been treated in different ways. These experiments have been criticized in the past because the sediment surface in the trays was elevated above the bottom and may therefore have interfered with natural boundary layer flow. Flume simulations of flow over these colonization trays revealed serious flow artifacts generated by the trays, and that flow across the sediment surface of the trays was characterized by turbulent eddies, accelerated velocities and boundary layer thickening. These sorts of flow characteristics would not be expected over natural sediments, and an alternative colonization tray was designed to eliminate these artifacts. To test the hypothesis that different types of food patches would result in different types of larval response, and determine how near-bed hydrodynamics may influence larval settlement, flush colonization trays filled with prefrozen sediment were deployed in tandem with artificial depressions south of St. Croix, U.S.V.I at 900 m depth. Colonization trays and artificial depressions were either unenriched or enriched with Thalassiosira sp. and Sargassum sp. two types of algae chosen to mimic natural food patches on the sea floor. Unexpectedly high densities of organisms colonized trays after only 23 days. The Thalassiosira trays were colonized by high densities of a relatively low diversity, opportunistic fauna, Sargassum trays were colonized by lower densities of a higher diversity fauna, and unenriched trays were colonized by very low numbers of a very diverse fauna. All tray faunas were markedly different in composition from the natural, ambient fauna. These fmdings suggest that different patch types did, indeed, result in a specialized faunal response to each of the "patch" types. Depressions on the sea floor provide a natural mechanism for food patch formation because passive particles such as detritus and algae tend to be entrained in the depressions. To determine whether dominant colonizers would be entrained in depressions like passive particles or could differentiate between depression "patch" types in a flow environment that might be expected to make active selection more difficult, artificial depressions were unenriched or enriched with Sargassum sp. or Thalassiosira sp. Total densities of organisms and densities of the most abundant species were substantially lower in artificial depressions than in trays. Densities in Thalassiosira depressions were lower than in Sargassum depressions and densities in unenriched depressions were extremely low, suggesting that dominant colonizers were not passively entrained in depressions and that colonization was specialized and highly active for these taxa. A different fauna was also observed in natural depressions compared with flush sediments, suggesting that natural depressions do contribute to species coexistence. Long-term tray deployments designed to test whether different faunas would be present in "patches" of different ages indicated that time may also play an important part in a deep-sea patch mosaic.
    Description: This was funded by NSF and ONR, NOAA, NSERC (Canada), WHOI Ocean Ventures Fund and the WHOI Ditty Bag Fund.
    Keywords: Benthos ; Marine sediments ; Deep-sea ecology ; Marine ecology ; Marine invertebrates ; Sediment transport
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Thesis
    Format: application/pdf
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