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Meiofauna towards the South Sandwich Trench (750-6300m), focus on nematodes
Vanhove, S.; Vermeeren, H.; Vanreusel, A. (2004). Meiofauna towards the South Sandwich Trench (750-6300m), focus on nematodes. Deep-Sea Res., Part 2, Top. Stud. Oceanogr. 51(14-16): 1665-1687. dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2004.06.029
In: Deep-Sea Research, Part II. Topical Studies in Oceanography. Pergamon: Oxford. ISSN 0967-0645; e-ISSN 1879-0100
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 
    Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee: Open Marine Archive 115335 [ download pdf ]

Keyword
    Marine/Coastal

Authors  Top 
  • Vanhove, S.
  • Vermeeren, H.
  • Vanreusel, A.

Abstract
    Meiobenthos (excluding foraminifers) from the South Sandwich Trench was studied in sediment samples collected by multiple core (MUC) or multiple grab (MG). Sampling stations were chosen along a depth transect that covered the continental slope and abyssal plain towards the trench (water depths from 747 to 6319 m). Total abundance and biomass of meiobenthos ranged between 354 and 1675 ind. 10 cm-2, and between 16.3 and 80.8 µg C 10 cm-2, respectively. Standing stock decreased, though not linearly, with increasing water depth. Biomasses and densities were situated above the world ocean's regression line of meiobenthic stocks against water depth, and higher on the trench floor (354–930 ind 10 cm-2, 18.7 µg C 10 cm-2 at 6300 m) compared to most other oceans’ trench regions. This observation confirms earlier results from the Antarctic continental margins that Antarctic meiofauna is characterised by dense populations in which nematodes predominate over the other taxonomic groups (87–98% of total abundance). Taxonomic investigations at genus level revealed that Chromadoridae, Monhysteridae, Desmodoridae, Desmoscolecidae, Xyalidae and Cyatholaimidae were dominant. Most of the nematode genera (in total 94) occurred in all depths, with only a slight distinction between the “shallow” (Daptonema, Dichromadora and Molgolaimus preferentially at 750–2300 m) and “deep” (with Tricoma preferentially from 3000 m on). The “shallow”communities were comparable to those from the Weddell Sea continental margin; the sediments at 2300–6300 m harboured in big lines similar compositions as abyssal and trench communities worldwide. Two main morph clusters were distinguished among the South Sandwich Trench nematodes: plump nematodes, with average L:W=9, belonging to the taxonomic similar selective deposit-feeding genera of the Desmoscolecida, and comparable slender nematodes (L:W=26; biomass size class -4 to -2) such as Monhystera, Acantholaimus, Daptonema, Dichromadora, Molgolaimus, Microlaimus and some species from Paracanthonchus, mixed among mainly selective and epistratum feeding modes. They formed the bulk of the trench community. The results did not fit well with the general decrease in standing stock with increasing water depth and distance from the continental shelf. Similarly, nematode size (length from 124 to 2991 µm, biomass from 0.023 to 0.042 µg dwt) did not show clear bathymetric trends. The lack of the usual deep-sea trends of structural characteristics of meiofauna in general (density, total biomass, taxon composition) and functional attributes of nematodes (morphometrics, biomass, trophic guild structure, and maturity index) is explained by the particularly complexity of the sedimentary environment of the South Sandwich Trench, which was the result of physical processes (turbidites), bioturbation activity by invertebrate taxa and food supply along the depth transect.

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