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Community structure and diversity of scavenging amphipods from bathyal to hadal depths in three South Pacific Trenches

Community structure and diversity of scavenging amphipods from bathyal to hadal depths in three South Pacific Trenches
Community structure and diversity of scavenging amphipods from bathyal to hadal depths in three South Pacific Trenches

There are few biological datasets that span large bathymetric ranges with sufficient resolution to identify trends across the abyssal and hadal transition zone, particularly over multiple trenches. Here, scavenging Amphipoda were collected from three trenches in the South Pacific Ocean at bathyal to hadal depths. Diversity and community structure were examined from stations within the Kermadec Trench (1490–9908 m) and New Hebrides Trench (2000–6948 m) and additional data were included from the South Fiji Basin (4000 m) and Peru-Chile Trench (4602–8074 m). The hadal community structure of the Kermadec and New Hebrides trenches were distinct from the surrounding abyssal and bathyal depths and correlated to hydrostatic pressure and POC flux. Low POC flux in the New Hebrides Trench and South Fiji Basin best explained the dissimilarity in abyssal community structure from those of the disparate Kermadec and Peru-Chile trenches. POC flux also best explained patterns in hadal community structure with the Kermadec and New Hebrides Trench communities showing greater similarity to each other than to the eutrophic Peru-Chile Trench. Hydrostatic pressure was the strongest driver of intra-trench assemblage composition in all trench environments. A unimodal pattern of species diversity, peaking between 4000 and 5000 m, was best explained by hydrostatic pressure and temperature.
Amphipoda, Community structure, Bathyal, Abyssal, Hadal, Kermadec Trench, New Hebrides Trench, Peru-Chile Trench
0967-0637
121-137
Lacey, Nichola C.
1e6147e7-1206-4ca4-be50-13b4e20d48f6
Rowden, Ashley A.
b70b6061-f562-4346-bbab-13ddba40cde2
Clark, Malcolm R.
cd47dc3e-9154-4ef9-a32f-d0e798c4e259
Kilgallen, Niamh M.
d3eb22fd-74a0-4612-a5da-174bdae6b704
Linley, Thomas
52bbc489-81bc-4422-89df-57e0d1e03e68
Mayor, Dan J.
89f58b1d-9874-4a21-b4ef-06f37d62f99e
Jamieson, Alan J.
ab7c9067-fe1d-47f9-921f-c57108b6f23c
Lacey, Nichola C.
1e6147e7-1206-4ca4-be50-13b4e20d48f6
Rowden, Ashley A.
b70b6061-f562-4346-bbab-13ddba40cde2
Clark, Malcolm R.
cd47dc3e-9154-4ef9-a32f-d0e798c4e259
Kilgallen, Niamh M.
d3eb22fd-74a0-4612-a5da-174bdae6b704
Linley, Thomas
52bbc489-81bc-4422-89df-57e0d1e03e68
Mayor, Dan J.
89f58b1d-9874-4a21-b4ef-06f37d62f99e
Jamieson, Alan J.
ab7c9067-fe1d-47f9-921f-c57108b6f23c

Lacey, Nichola C., Rowden, Ashley A., Clark, Malcolm R., Kilgallen, Niamh M., Linley, Thomas, Mayor, Dan J. and Jamieson, Alan J. (2016) Community structure and diversity of scavenging amphipods from bathyal to hadal depths in three South Pacific Trenches. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 111, 121-137. (doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2016.02.014).

Record type: Article

Abstract


There are few biological datasets that span large bathymetric ranges with sufficient resolution to identify trends across the abyssal and hadal transition zone, particularly over multiple trenches. Here, scavenging Amphipoda were collected from three trenches in the South Pacific Ocean at bathyal to hadal depths. Diversity and community structure were examined from stations within the Kermadec Trench (1490–9908 m) and New Hebrides Trench (2000–6948 m) and additional data were included from the South Fiji Basin (4000 m) and Peru-Chile Trench (4602–8074 m). The hadal community structure of the Kermadec and New Hebrides trenches were distinct from the surrounding abyssal and bathyal depths and correlated to hydrostatic pressure and POC flux. Low POC flux in the New Hebrides Trench and South Fiji Basin best explained the dissimilarity in abyssal community structure from those of the disparate Kermadec and Peru-Chile trenches. POC flux also best explained patterns in hadal community structure with the Kermadec and New Hebrides Trench communities showing greater similarity to each other than to the eutrophic Peru-Chile Trench. Hydrostatic pressure was the strongest driver of intra-trench assemblage composition in all trench environments. A unimodal pattern of species diversity, peaking between 4000 and 5000 m, was best explained by hydrostatic pressure and temperature.

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More information

Published date: May 2016
Keywords: Amphipoda, Community structure, Bathyal, Abyssal, Hadal, Kermadec Trench, New Hebrides Trench, Peru-Chile Trench
Organisations: Marine Biogeochemistry

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 393688
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/393688
ISSN: 0967-0637
PURE UUID: 06a44070-ec61-42fc-ad4e-878075b09a9f

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 29 Apr 2016 13:03
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 00:07

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Contributors

Author: Nichola C. Lacey
Author: Ashley A. Rowden
Author: Malcolm R. Clark
Author: Niamh M. Kilgallen
Author: Thomas Linley
Author: Dan J. Mayor
Author: Alan J. Jamieson

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