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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2018-03-21
    Description: The influence of sampler type on quantitative estimates of deep-sea meiobenthos is examined by an indirect statistical comparison of box corer and multiple corer samples collected throughout the northeast Atlantic, and by a direct comparison of contemporaneously collected multiple corer and box corer samples from a single abyssal location. The data strongly support the suggestion that the greater down-wash/bow wave associated with box corers results in displacement of surface sediments and any superfic~al detrltus layer together with thelr associated fauna. Total metazoan meiobenthos density estimates from box corer samples are about half those from corresponding multiple corer samples Sampler type may also influence the fauna1 composition of both the metazoan and protozoan components of the meiobenthos.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-09-17
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2018-06-01
    Description: Submarine mud volcanism represents an important. pathway for methane from deeper reservoirs to the surface, where it enters the benthic carbon cycle. To quantify overall methane release from the Captain Arutyunov mud volcano (CAMV) and to assess the contribution of macrobenthic seep organisms to the regulation of the benthic methane flux, we linked water column methane concentrations, seabed methane emission and pore water geochemistry to the spatial distribution of seep biota. Prominent organisms of the CAMV seep biota were 3 different species of frenulate tubeworms. Seabed methane emission ranged from 0.001 to 0.66 mmol m(-2) d(-1). Dense patches of tubeworms were associated with the lowest seabed methane emission. Elevated methane emission was associated with a sporadic distribution of tubeworms and the occurrence of numerous mud clasts. Despite the presence of a large subsurface methane reservoir, the estimated total methane release from CAMV was low (0.006 x 10(6) mol yr(-1)). In addition to direct methane consumption by Siboglinum poseidoni, the tubeworms likely contribute to the retention of methane carbon in the sediment by affecting bacterial communities in the proximity of the tubes. The siboglinids create new meso-scale habitats on the sediment Surface, increasing habitat heterogeneity and introducing niches for bacterial communities.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-05-28
    Description: The effect of methane released from decomposing surficial gas hydrates (SGH) on standing stocks and activities of the small-sized benthic biota (SSBB; i.e. bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and meiobenthic organisms) was studied at about 790 m water depth, at the Hydrate Ridge, Cascadia subduction zone. Presence of SGH and elevated sulfide concentrations in the sediment were indicated by extensive bacterial mats of Beggiatoa sp. and clam fields of the bivalve mollusc Calyptogena sp. Vertical and horizontal distribution patterns of the SSBB biomass were derived from DNA and total adenylate (TA) sediment assays. Potential bacterial exoenzymatic hydrolytic activity was measured using fluorescein-di-acetate (FDA) as substrate. Estimates of chemoautotrophic production of particulate organic carbon (POC.) were determined by 14CO2 uptake incubations. Inventories of chl a and pheopigments were determined as parameters of surface water primary produced POC input. Average SSBB biomass in clam field sediments integrated over the upper 10 cm (765.2 gC m-2, SD 190.1) was 3.6 times higher than in the adjacent control sites (213 gC m-2, SD 125). Average SSBB biomass in bacterial mat sediments, which were almost devoid of eukaryotic organisms 〉 31 µm, was 209 gC m-2 (SD 65). Significant correlations between FDA, DNA and plant pigments imply that productivity of the SSBB at SGH sites is only partially uncoupled from the primary production of the surface water. Areal estimates of autotrophic Corg production at control sites, bacterial mat sites and in clam field sites were 5.7, 59.7 and 190.0 mgC m-2 d-1, respectively. Based on different models predicting vertical POC fluxes from surface water primary production and water depth, these autotrophic POC productions account for 5 to 17% (controls), 35 to 68% (bacterial mats), and 63 to 87% (clam fields) of the bulk POC (sum of allochthonous POC input through the water column and sedimentary autochthonous autotrophic POC production) provided at the various sites. At SGH sites inventories of chl a and pheopigments, integrated over the upper 10 cm of the sediment, were half of that found at the control sites. This might be due to enhanced degradation of phytodetritally associated organic matter. The resulting low molecular weight organic carbon compounds might stimulate and fuel sulfate reduction, which is conducted in a microbial consortium with anaerobic methane consuming archaea. This syntrophic consortium might represent a prominent interface between gas hydrate derived carbon and allochthonous Corg flow. We infer that degradation kinetics of SGH is affected by, e.g., seasonally varying input of allochthonous organic matter.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 5
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 337 . pp. 27-37.
    Publication Date: 2018-06-01
    Description: The effect of methane seepage from sediments harbouring shallow gas hydrates on standing stocks and the distribution pattern of meiobenthic organisms, in particular Nematoda and Rotifera, was studied at about 800 m water depth at Hydrate Ridge, Cascadia subduction zone, off Oregon. The presence of shallow gas hydrates, buried only a few 10s of centimetres below the sediment surface, was indicated by extensive bacterial mats of chemosynthetic Beggiatoa sp. and clam fields of the bivalve mollusk Calyptogena spp. Mean abundances of meiobenthic organisms integrated over the upper 10 cm of the sediment were highest (1294 ind. 10 cm–2) at clam fields, closely followed by control sediments least affected by gas hydrates (1199 ind. 10 cm–2) and lowest in sediments covered with bacterial mats (762 ind. 10 cm–2). Average meiobenthic biomass was highest at the clam field site (262.2 µg C 10 cm–2), 210.4 µg C 10 cm–2 at the control site and very low in sediments covered with bacterial mats (61.4 µg C 10 cm–2). The dominant taxa of meiobenthic organisms at the investigated sites were nematodes and, unexpectedly, Rotifera that are almost unknown from the deep marine habitat. In terms of abundance, rotifera dominated the meiobenthic community in gas-hydrate-influenced sediments, while control sediments and deeper basins adjoined to Hydrate Ridge were dominated by nematodes. Nematodes were concentrated in the sediment surface at all sites, whereas rotifers were almost evenly distributed at all depths, with a slight preference for deeper sediment horizons. The horizontal as well as vertical distribution of nematodes and rotifers is likely to be determined by competition or predation, and by the high adaptive capability of rotifers to highly sulphidic and anoxic conditions. Estimates of meiobenthic carbon turnover in relation to the bulk organic carbon supply indicate that, in contrast to other meiobenthic communities in cold seep environments, the meiobenthos in the studied gas-hydrate-containing sediments do not benefit from the excess availability of organic carbon via the chemoautotrophic food web. This may be because, for most meiobenthic organisms (other than rotifers), tolerance mechanisms are overwhelmed by the deleterious environmental conditions of reduced oxygen availability and extremely high sulphide fluxes.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2018-05-31
    Description: Living (Rose Bengal stained) foraminifera in gas-hydrate-influenced sediments at the Cascadia convergent margin were investigated. Foraminiferal assemblages from the southern Hydrate Ridge and neighboring basins were compared in terms of abundances, vertical distribution, diversity, and species composition. At Hydrate Ridge, the presence of shallow gas hydrates and increased porewater sulfide concentrations was indicated by extensive bacterial mats of Beggiatoa sp. and clam beds of the bivalve mollusk Calyptogena sp., generating different biological zones. Living foraminifera were found in all biological zones, in sediment layers down to 5 cm. They showed highly variable densities within all zones. The average abundance of benthic foraminifera at Hydrate Ridge differs from neighboring basins. Average species diversities are comparable between biological zones, while the average number of species increases from bacterial mats to clam fields and surrounding sediments. Foraminifera can be characterized by 5 principal component communities which explain 97.3% of the variance of the live assemblages at the southern Hydrate Ridge and neighboring basins. At Hydrate Ridge, 2 foraminiferal zones can be distinguished: (1) an Uvigerina peregrina community which characterizes sediments covered with bacterial mats and clam fields; (2) a ?Spiroplectammina biformis community in the surrounding non-seep sediments. Foraminiferal assemblages in the neighboring Western and Eastern Basin differ from the Hydrate Ridge stations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 7
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    Inter Research
    In:  Marine Ecology Progress Series, 39 . pp. 153-167.
    Publication Date: 2018-05-04
    Description: A cyclonic cold-core eddy in the Northeast Atlantic of about 100 km in diameter at the sea surface was investigated in May 1985, approximately 3 wk after it had separated from the Polar Front. A strong thermocline, which was shallower but more pronounced than in the ambient water, separated a warm surface layer within the eddy from deeper cold water, while horizontal salinity gradients marked the boundary to the ambient water. The cold-core eddy could be distinguished from amblent Northeast Atlantic water in terms of its nutrient chemistry, phytoplankton species distribution and abundance, bacterial numbers and cell size. The surface layer of the eddy was distinct from deeper eddy water, and was characterized by high concentrations of chlorophyll a, total phytoplankton biomass, dinoflagellates and bacteria. At the eddy's margin diatoms were predominant. It is argued that the physical isolation of the eddy surface layer due to the formation of a shallow thermocline led to rapid utilisation of nutrients. This probably enabled the development of a dinoflagellate-dominated phytoplankton population and of organisms capable of heterotrophic regenerative processes.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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