Anthropogenic disturbance of deep-sea megabenthic assemblages: a study with Remotely-Operated Vehicles in the Faroe-Shetland Channel, NE Atlantic
Anthropogenic disturbance of deep-sea megabenthic assemblages: a study with Remotely-Operated Vehicles in the Faroe-Shetland Channel, NE Atlantic
The effects of local-scale anthropogenic disturbance from active drilling platforms on epibenthic megafaunal abundance, diversity and assemblage pattern were examined in two West of Shetland hydrocarbon fields at 420 m and 508 m water depth. These areas were selected to include a range of disturbance regimes and contrasting faunal assemblages associated with different temperature regimes. Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) video provided high-resolution megafaunal abundance and diversity data, which were related to the extent of visible disturbance from drilling spoil. These data, in conjunction with a study deeper in the Faroe-Shetland Channel, have allowed comparison of the effects of disturbance on megabenthos across a range of sites. Disturbance to megafaunal assemblages was found to be high within 50 m of the source of drill spoil and in areas where spoil was clearly visible on the seabed, with depressed abundances (Foinaven 1900 individuals ha-1; Schiehallion 2178 individuals ha-1) and diversity (H´ = 1.75 Foinaven; 1.12 Schiehallion) as a result of smothering effects. These effects extended to around 100 m from the source of disturbance, although this was variable, particularly with current regime and nature of drilling activity. Further from the source of disturbance, megafaunal assemblages became more typical of the background area with increased diversity (H´ = 2.02 Foinaven; 1.77 Schiehallion) and abundance (Foinaven 16484 individuals ha-1; Schiehallion 5477 individuals ha-1). Visible effects on megafaunal assemblages as a result of seabed drilling were limited in extent although assemblage responses were complex, being controlled by differing effects to individual species often based on their motility.
Benthos, disturbance, megafauna, ROV imaging, abundance, diversity, ecosystem function, Faroe-Shetland Channel
1731-1741
Jones, Daniel O.B.
44fc07b3-5fb7-4bf5-9cec-78c78022613a
Wigham, Ben D.
07fe38d7-d7b9-431b-9f52-32c68954982c
Hudson, Ian R.
ab98ee5c-71a5-4ffb-a770-89ad47f39732
Bett, Brian J.
61342990-13be-45ae-9f5c-9540114335d9
June 2007
Jones, Daniel O.B.
44fc07b3-5fb7-4bf5-9cec-78c78022613a
Wigham, Ben D.
07fe38d7-d7b9-431b-9f52-32c68954982c
Hudson, Ian R.
ab98ee5c-71a5-4ffb-a770-89ad47f39732
Bett, Brian J.
61342990-13be-45ae-9f5c-9540114335d9
Jones, Daniel O.B., Wigham, Ben D., Hudson, Ian R. and Bett, Brian J.
(2007)
Anthropogenic disturbance of deep-sea megabenthic assemblages: a study with Remotely-Operated Vehicles in the Faroe-Shetland Channel, NE Atlantic.
Marine Biology, 151 (5), .
(doi:10.1007/s00227-007-0606-3).
Abstract
The effects of local-scale anthropogenic disturbance from active drilling platforms on epibenthic megafaunal abundance, diversity and assemblage pattern were examined in two West of Shetland hydrocarbon fields at 420 m and 508 m water depth. These areas were selected to include a range of disturbance regimes and contrasting faunal assemblages associated with different temperature regimes. Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) video provided high-resolution megafaunal abundance and diversity data, which were related to the extent of visible disturbance from drilling spoil. These data, in conjunction with a study deeper in the Faroe-Shetland Channel, have allowed comparison of the effects of disturbance on megabenthos across a range of sites. Disturbance to megafaunal assemblages was found to be high within 50 m of the source of drill spoil and in areas where spoil was clearly visible on the seabed, with depressed abundances (Foinaven 1900 individuals ha-1; Schiehallion 2178 individuals ha-1) and diversity (H´ = 1.75 Foinaven; 1.12 Schiehallion) as a result of smothering effects. These effects extended to around 100 m from the source of disturbance, although this was variable, particularly with current regime and nature of drilling activity. Further from the source of disturbance, megafaunal assemblages became more typical of the background area with increased diversity (H´ = 2.02 Foinaven; 1.77 Schiehallion) and abundance (Foinaven 16484 individuals ha-1; Schiehallion 5477 individuals ha-1). Visible effects on megafaunal assemblages as a result of seabed drilling were limited in extent although assemblage responses were complex, being controlled by differing effects to individual species often based on their motility.
Text
Jones_et_al_2007.pdf
- Other
More information
Submitted date: 20 July 2006
Published date: June 2007
Keywords:
Benthos, disturbance, megafauna, ROV imaging, abundance, diversity, ecosystem function, Faroe-Shetland Channel
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 42950
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/42950
ISSN: 0025-3162
PURE UUID: 108be383-00cb-48b6-b9f3-d7b8b2a4efcb
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 04 Jan 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:51
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Daniel O.B. Jones
Author:
Ben D. Wigham
Author:
Ian R. Hudson
Author:
Brian J. Bett
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics