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  • ANT-XXIV/2; Arctic Ocean; ARK-XXII/2; AWI_Paleo; BC; Box corer; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Cruise/expedition; Date/Time of event; Davis Strait; Elevation of event; Event label; Galathea_3_Win3; Galathea_3_Win4; Galathea_3_Win6; Galathea 3; HDMS Vaedderen; KT07-14; KT07-14_MC03; KT07-14_MC04; KT07-14_MC07; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Maria S. Merian; MARUM; MC03; MC04; MC07; MSM09/2; MSM09/2_432-5; MSM09/2_453-7; MSM09/2_472-2; MUC; MultiCorer; Name; Number of e-ribotype; Number of genotype; Number of morphospecies; Number of sequences; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS70/239-6; PS70/265-1; PS70/265-2; PS70/299-2; PS70/309-8; PS70 SPACE DAMOCLES; PS71/033-12; PS71/085-5; PS71/085-7; PS71 ANDEEP-SYSTCO SCACE; Reads; Reference/source; Sediment type; South Atlantic Ocean; Station label; Tansei Maru; Weddell Sea; Win 3; Win 4; Win 6  (1)
  • AWI; Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; SPP1158  (1)
Document type
Keywords
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Years
  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Brandt, Angelika; Gooday, Andrew J; Brandão, Simone N; Brix, Saskia; Brökeland, Wiebke; Cedhagen, Tomas; Choudhury, Madhumita; Cornelius, Nils; Danis, Bruno; De Mesel, Ilse; Diaz, Robert; Gillan, David C; Ebbe, Brigitte; Howe, John; Janussen, Dorte; Kaiser, Stefanie; Linse, Katrin; Malyutina, Marina; Pawlowski, Jan; Raupach, Michael R; Vanreusel, Ann (2007): First insights into the biodiversity and biogeography of the Southern Ocean deep sea. Nature, 447(7142), 307-311, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature05827
    Publication Date: 2023-10-28
    Description: Shallow marine benthic communities around Antarctica show high levels of endemism, gigantism, slow growth, longevity and late maturity, as well as adaptive radiations that have generated considerable biodiversity in some taxa1. The deeper parts of the Southern Ocean exhibit some unique environmental features, including a very deep continental shelf2 and a weakly stratified water column, and are the source for much of the deep water in the world ocean. These features suggest that deep-sea faunas around the Antarctic may be related both to adjacent shelf communities and to those in other oceans. Unlike shallow-water Antarctic benthic communities, however, little is known about life in this vast deep-sea region2, 3. Here, we report new data from recent sampling expeditions in the deep Weddell Sea and adjacent areas (748-6,348 m water depth) that reveal high levels of new biodiversity; for example, 674 isopods species, of which 585 were new to science. Bathymetric and biogeographic trends varied between taxa. In groups such as the isopods and polychaetes, slope assemblages included species that have invaded from the shelf. In other taxa, the shelf and slope assemblages were more distinct. Abyssal faunas tended to have stronger links to other oceans, particularly the Atlantic, but mainly in taxa with good dispersal capabilities, such as the Foraminifera. The isopods, ostracods and nematodes, which are poor dispersers, include many species currently known only from the Southern Ocean. Our findings challenge suggestions that deep-sea diversity is depressed in the Southern Ocean and provide a basis for exploring the evolutionary significance of the varied biogeographic patterns observed in this remote environment.
    Keywords: AWI; Priority Programme 1158 Antarctic Research with Comparable Investigations in Arctic Sea Ice Areas; SPP1158
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Morard, Raphael; Lejzerowicz, Franck; Darling, Kate F; Lecroq-Bennet, Beatrice; Pedersen, Mikkel Winther; Orlando, Ludovic; Pawlowski, Jan; Mulitza, Stefan; De Vargas, Colomban; Kucera, Michal (2017): Planktonic foraminifera-derived environmental DNA extracted from abyssal sediments preserves patterns of plankton macroecology. Biogeosciences, 14, 2741-2754, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-14-2741-2017
    Publication Date: 2024-02-02
    Description: Deep-sea sediments constitute a unique archive of ocean change, fueled by a permanent rain of mineral and organic remains from the surface ocean. Until now, paleo-ecological analyses of this archive have been mostly based on information from taxa leaving fossils. In theory, environmental DNA (eDNA) in the sediment has the potential to provide information on non-fossilized taxa, allowing more comprehensive interpretations of the fossil record. Yet, the process controlling the transport and deposition of eDNA onto the sediment and the extent to which it preserves the features of past oceanic biota remains unknown. Planktonic foraminifera are the ideal taxa to allow an assessment of the eDNA signal modification during deposition because their fossils are well preserved in the sediment and their morphological taxonomy is documented by DNA barcodes. Specifically, we re-analyze foraminiferal-specific metabarcodes from 31 deep-sea sediment samples, which were shown to contain a small fraction of sequences from planktonic foraminifera. We confirm that the largest portion of the metabarcode originates from benthic bottom-dwelling foraminifera, representing the in situ community, but a small portion (〈10 %) of the metabarcodes can be unambiguously assigned to planktonic taxa. These organisms live exclusively in the surface ocean and the recovered barcodes thus represent an allochthonous component deposited with the rain of organic remains from the surface ocean. We take advantage of the planktonic foraminifera portion of the metabarcodes to establish to what extent the structure of the surface ocean biota is preserved in sedimentary eDNA. We show that planktonic foraminifera DNA is preserved in a range of marine sediment types, the composition of the recovered eDNA metabarcode is replicable and that both the similarity structure and the diversity pattern are preserved. Our results suggest that sedimentary eDNA could preserve the ecological structure of the entire pelagic community, including non-fossilized taxa, thus opening new avenues for paleoceanographic and paleoecological studies.
    Keywords: ANT-XXIV/2; Arctic Ocean; ARK-XXII/2; AWI_Paleo; BC; Box corer; Center for Marine Environmental Sciences; Cruise/expedition; Date/Time of event; Davis Strait; Elevation of event; Event label; Galathea_3_Win3; Galathea_3_Win4; Galathea_3_Win6; Galathea 3; HDMS Vaedderen; KT07-14; KT07-14_MC03; KT07-14_MC04; KT07-14_MC07; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; Maria S. Merian; MARUM; MC03; MC04; MC07; MSM09/2; MSM09/2_432-5; MSM09/2_453-7; MSM09/2_472-2; MUC; MultiCorer; Name; Number of e-ribotype; Number of genotype; Number of morphospecies; Number of sequences; Paleoenvironmental Reconstructions from Marine Sediments @ AWI; Polarstern; PS70/239-6; PS70/265-1; PS70/265-2; PS70/299-2; PS70/309-8; PS70 SPACE DAMOCLES; PS71/033-12; PS71/085-5; PS71/085-7; PS71 ANDEEP-SYSTCO SCACE; Reads; Reference/source; Sediment type; South Atlantic Ocean; Station label; Tansei Maru; Weddell Sea; Win 3; Win 4; Win 6
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 496 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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