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Benthic assemblages of the Anton Dohrn seamount (NE Atlantic): defining deep-sea biotopes to support habitat mapping and management efforts with a focus on vulnerable marine ecosystems

Benthic assemblages of the Anton Dohrn seamount (NE Atlantic): defining deep-sea biotopes to support habitat mapping and management efforts with a focus on vulnerable marine ecosystems
Benthic assemblages of the Anton Dohrn seamount (NE Atlantic): defining deep-sea biotopes to support habitat mapping and management efforts with a focus on vulnerable marine ecosystems
In 2009 the NW and SE flanks of Anton Dohrn Seamount were surveyed using multibeam echosounder and video ground-truthing to characterise megabenthic biological assemblages (biotopes) and assess those which clearly adhere to the definition of Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems, for use in habitat mapping. A combination of multivariate analysis of still imagery and video ground-truthing defined 13 comprehensive descriptions of biotopes that function as mapping units in an applied context. The data reveals that the NW and SE sides of Anton Dohrn Seamount (ADS) are topographically complex and harbour diverse biological assemblages, some of which agree with current definitions of ‘listed’ habitats of conservation concern. Ten of these biotopes could easily be considered Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems; three coral gardens, four cold-water coral reefs, two xenophyophore communities and one sponge dominated community, with remaining biotopes requiring more detailed assessment. Coral gardens were only found on positive geomorphic features, namely parasitic cones and radial ridges, found both sides of the seamount over a depth of 1311–1740 m. Two cold-water coral reefs (equivalent to summit reef) were mapped on the NW side of the seamount; Lophelia pertusa reef associated with the cliff top mounds at a depth of 747–791 m and Solenosmilia variabilis reef on a radial ridge at a depth of 1318-1351 m. Xenophyophore communities were mapped from both sides of the seamount at a depth of 1099–1770 m and were either associated with geomorphic features or were in close proximity (< 100 m) to them. The sponge dominated community was found on the steep escarpment either side of the seamount over at a depth of 854-1345 m. Multivariate diversity revealed the xenophyophore biotopes to be the least diverse, and a hard substratum biotope characterised by serpulids and the sessile holothurian, Psolus squamatus, as the most diverse.
1932-6203
e0124815
Davies, Andrew
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Davies, Jaime S.
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Stewart, Heather A.
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Narayanaswamy, Bhavani E.
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Jacobs, Colin
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Spicer, John
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Golding, Neil
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Howell, Kerry L.
ed24ce04-6261-4350-b55a-e8c7bdfc7dc2
Davies, Andrew
dc4a10da-d700-4b73-aa81-2976d3b79576
Davies, Jaime S.
90bb411e-4ba9-4f7c-88e7-2013dbc11bbf
Stewart, Heather A.
72c4d700-17aa-42a2-9297-81050cbd3cb2
Narayanaswamy, Bhavani E.
fcecfc2f-1db0-4786-a379-78411de47a3d
Jacobs, Colin
1624f91c-deee-496d-bd5b-7cd1e88f652b
Spicer, John
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Golding, Neil
3ad831cb-1f66-4334-9fa9-cfa926a85de5
Howell, Kerry L.
ed24ce04-6261-4350-b55a-e8c7bdfc7dc2

Davies, Andrew, Davies, Jaime S., Stewart, Heather A., Narayanaswamy, Bhavani E., Jacobs, Colin, Spicer, John, Golding, Neil and Howell, Kerry L. (2015) Benthic assemblages of the Anton Dohrn seamount (NE Atlantic): defining deep-sea biotopes to support habitat mapping and management efforts with a focus on vulnerable marine ecosystems. PLoS ONE, 10 (5), e0124815. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0124815).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In 2009 the NW and SE flanks of Anton Dohrn Seamount were surveyed using multibeam echosounder and video ground-truthing to characterise megabenthic biological assemblages (biotopes) and assess those which clearly adhere to the definition of Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems, for use in habitat mapping. A combination of multivariate analysis of still imagery and video ground-truthing defined 13 comprehensive descriptions of biotopes that function as mapping units in an applied context. The data reveals that the NW and SE sides of Anton Dohrn Seamount (ADS) are topographically complex and harbour diverse biological assemblages, some of which agree with current definitions of ‘listed’ habitats of conservation concern. Ten of these biotopes could easily be considered Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems; three coral gardens, four cold-water coral reefs, two xenophyophore communities and one sponge dominated community, with remaining biotopes requiring more detailed assessment. Coral gardens were only found on positive geomorphic features, namely parasitic cones and radial ridges, found both sides of the seamount over a depth of 1311–1740 m. Two cold-water coral reefs (equivalent to summit reef) were mapped on the NW side of the seamount; Lophelia pertusa reef associated with the cliff top mounds at a depth of 747–791 m and Solenosmilia variabilis reef on a radial ridge at a depth of 1318-1351 m. Xenophyophore communities were mapped from both sides of the seamount at a depth of 1099–1770 m and were either associated with geomorphic features or were in close proximity (< 100 m) to them. The sponge dominated community was found on the steep escarpment either side of the seamount over at a depth of 854-1345 m. Multivariate diversity revealed the xenophyophore biotopes to be the least diverse, and a hard substratum biotope characterised by serpulids and the sessile holothurian, Psolus squamatus, as the most diverse.

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Published date: 18 May 2015
Organisations: Marine Geoscience

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Local EPrints ID: 377420
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/377420
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 3af0a1c6-613d-49f3-b5ba-1e2e00569307

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Date deposited: 26 May 2015 08:55
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:03

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Contributors

Author: Andrew Davies
Author: Jaime S. Davies
Author: Heather A. Stewart
Author: Bhavani E. Narayanaswamy
Author: Colin Jacobs
Author: John Spicer
Author: Neil Golding
Author: Kerry L. Howell

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