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Organic biogeochemistry of the Darwin Mounds, a deep-water coral ecosystem, of the NE Atlantic

Organic biogeochemistry of the Darwin Mounds, a deep-water coral ecosystem, of the NE Atlantic
Organic biogeochemistry of the Darwin Mounds, a deep-water coral ecosystem, of the NE Atlantic
The Darwin Mounds are a series of small (5 m high, 75–100 m diameter) sandy features located in the northern Rockall Trough. They provide a habitat for communities of Lophelia pertusa and associated fauna. Suspended particulate organic matter (sPOM) reaching the deep-sea floor, which could potentially fuel this deep-water coral (DWC) ecosystem, was collected during summer 2000. This was relatively “fresh” (i.e. dominated by labile lipids such as polyunsaturated fatty acids) and was derived largely from phytoplankton remains and faecal pellets, with contributions from bacteria and microzooplankton. Labile sPOM components were enriched in the benthic boundary layer (10 m above bottom (mab)) relative to 150 mab. The action of certain benthic fauna that are exclusively associated with the DWC ecosystem (e.g. echiuran worms) leads to the subduction of fresh organic material into the sediments. The mound surface sediments are enriched in organic carbon, relative to off-mound sites. There is no evidence for hydrocarbon venting at this location.
Rockall Trough, Darwin Mounds, Lophelia pertusa, deep-water corals, suspended particulate organic matter, lipids, polyunsaturated fatty acids, sediments, bioturbation
0967-0637
1937-1954
Kiriakoulakis, K.
d9834ec4-e9a3-4dd3-8226-fe1da2514471
Bett, B.J.
61342990-13be-45ae-9f5c-9540114335d9
White, M.
f3f45975-da5c-48da-9f6f-c368c5a8146b
Wolff, G.A.
3a42c086-8356-449b-9d40-9b16758733c2
Kiriakoulakis, K.
d9834ec4-e9a3-4dd3-8226-fe1da2514471
Bett, B.J.
61342990-13be-45ae-9f5c-9540114335d9
White, M.
f3f45975-da5c-48da-9f6f-c368c5a8146b
Wolff, G.A.
3a42c086-8356-449b-9d40-9b16758733c2

Kiriakoulakis, K., Bett, B.J., White, M. and Wolff, G.A. (2004) Organic biogeochemistry of the Darwin Mounds, a deep-water coral ecosystem, of the NE Atlantic. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 51 (12), 1937-1954. (doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2004.07.010).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The Darwin Mounds are a series of small (5 m high, 75–100 m diameter) sandy features located in the northern Rockall Trough. They provide a habitat for communities of Lophelia pertusa and associated fauna. Suspended particulate organic matter (sPOM) reaching the deep-sea floor, which could potentially fuel this deep-water coral (DWC) ecosystem, was collected during summer 2000. This was relatively “fresh” (i.e. dominated by labile lipids such as polyunsaturated fatty acids) and was derived largely from phytoplankton remains and faecal pellets, with contributions from bacteria and microzooplankton. Labile sPOM components were enriched in the benthic boundary layer (10 m above bottom (mab)) relative to 150 mab. The action of certain benthic fauna that are exclusively associated with the DWC ecosystem (e.g. echiuran worms) leads to the subduction of fresh organic material into the sediments. The mound surface sediments are enriched in organic carbon, relative to off-mound sites. There is no evidence for hydrocarbon venting at this location.

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More information

Published date: 2004
Keywords: Rockall Trough, Darwin Mounds, Lophelia pertusa, deep-water corals, suspended particulate organic matter, lipids, polyunsaturated fatty acids, sediments, bioturbation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 14891
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/14891
ISSN: 0967-0637
PURE UUID: e6f2d590-37e4-4147-87ae-886ad4c24c6c

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 17 Mar 2005
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:32

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Contributors

Author: K. Kiriakoulakis
Author: B.J. Bett
Author: M. White
Author: G.A. Wolff

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