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First quantitative exploration of benthic megafaunal assemblages on the mid-oceanic ridge system of the Carlsberg Ridge, Indian Ocean

First quantitative exploration of benthic megafaunal assemblages on the mid-oceanic ridge system of the Carlsberg Ridge, Indian Ocean
First quantitative exploration of benthic megafaunal assemblages on the mid-oceanic ridge system of the Carlsberg Ridge, Indian Ocean
There are few quantitative studies on deep-sea biodiversity from the Indian Ocean, particularly on the mid-ocean ridges (MOR). We investigated the benthic megafaunal community structure of the Indian Ocean MOR at the Carlsberg Ridge (CR) using underwater video observation by the Television Gripper (TVG) and Ocean Floor Observation System (OFOS) during a multidisciplinary scientific cruise in 2007. Our aim was to observe megafaunal assemblages and their variation with bottom substrate at different geological settings in the CR region. The fauna was identified at best possible taxonomic resolution from video images and data were quantified by photogrammetry. Variation of substratum type was greatest in the deeper areas of the CR region, with substrata varying from fine sediments to basalts. A total of eight substratum types and 90 megafaunal taxa, representing seven phyla, have been classified throughout the 10 transects. Faunal abundances ranged between 171.3 to 5.7 animals 1000 m−2, with higher abundances at the shallower transects, in off-axial highs, and lower at deeper zones, on the rift valley wall and floor. Cnidarians were dominant at off-axial highs while echinoderms prevailed at rift valley floor transects. Other frequently encountered faunal components were poriferans and chordates, observed at shallower as well as deeper transects. This is the first detailed investigation of megafaunal assemblages from the Indian Ocean MOR.
0025-3154
409-417
Sautya, Sabyasachi
e87f224e-c883-49a8-9f28-41a582fc6b7d
Ingole, Baban
3ef8d55f-4c7e-4ef4-9878-3c171077883a
Jones, Daniel O. B.
44fc07b3-5fb7-4bf5-9cec-78c78022613a
Ray, Durbar
e746919e-3d5b-4438-ab9d-369cbe745ee1
Kameshraju, K. A.
6748e7d9-5f46-4523-a4de-d17f16d784d7
Sautya, Sabyasachi
e87f224e-c883-49a8-9f28-41a582fc6b7d
Ingole, Baban
3ef8d55f-4c7e-4ef4-9878-3c171077883a
Jones, Daniel O. B.
44fc07b3-5fb7-4bf5-9cec-78c78022613a
Ray, Durbar
e746919e-3d5b-4438-ab9d-369cbe745ee1
Kameshraju, K. A.
6748e7d9-5f46-4523-a4de-d17f16d784d7

Sautya, Sabyasachi, Ingole, Baban, Jones, Daniel O. B., Ray, Durbar and Kameshraju, K. A. (2017) First quantitative exploration of benthic megafaunal assemblages on the mid-oceanic ridge system of the Carlsberg Ridge, Indian Ocean. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 97 (2), 409-417. (doi:10.1017/S0025315416000515).

Record type: Article

Abstract

There are few quantitative studies on deep-sea biodiversity from the Indian Ocean, particularly on the mid-ocean ridges (MOR). We investigated the benthic megafaunal community structure of the Indian Ocean MOR at the Carlsberg Ridge (CR) using underwater video observation by the Television Gripper (TVG) and Ocean Floor Observation System (OFOS) during a multidisciplinary scientific cruise in 2007. Our aim was to observe megafaunal assemblages and their variation with bottom substrate at different geological settings in the CR region. The fauna was identified at best possible taxonomic resolution from video images and data were quantified by photogrammetry. Variation of substratum type was greatest in the deeper areas of the CR region, with substrata varying from fine sediments to basalts. A total of eight substratum types and 90 megafaunal taxa, representing seven phyla, have been classified throughout the 10 transects. Faunal abundances ranged between 171.3 to 5.7 animals 1000 m−2, with higher abundances at the shallower transects, in off-axial highs, and lower at deeper zones, on the rift valley wall and floor. Cnidarians were dominant at off-axial highs while echinoderms prevailed at rift valley floor transects. Other frequently encountered faunal components were poriferans and chordates, observed at shallower as well as deeper transects. This is the first detailed investigation of megafaunal assemblages from the Indian Ocean MOR.

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Sautya et al 2017 postprint - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 March 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 April 2016
Published date: 1 March 2017
Organisations: Ocean Biochemistry & Ecosystems, National Oceanography Centre

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 407660
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/407660
ISSN: 0025-3154
PURE UUID: acfec0f1-d3da-432f-ad30-f919c5bfab21

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Date deposited: 21 Apr 2017 01:01
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:16

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Contributors

Author: Sabyasachi Sautya
Author: Baban Ingole
Author: Daniel O. B. Jones
Author: Durbar Ray
Author: K. A. Kameshraju

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