Reef communities associated with 'dead' cold-water coral framework drive resource retention and recycling in the deep sea

被引:24
|
作者
Maier, Sandra R. [1 ]
Mienis, Furu [2 ]
de Froe, Evert [2 ]
Soetaert, Karline [1 ,3 ]
Lavaleye, Marc [2 ]
Duineveld, Gerard [2 ]
Beauchard, Olivier [1 ]
Kaaden, Anna-Selma van der [1 ]
Koch, Boris P. [4 ,5 ]
van Oevelen, Dick [1 ]
机构
[1] Royal Netherlands Inst Sea Res NIOZ Yerseke, Dept Estuarine & Delta Syst, Yerseke, Netherlands
[2] Royal Netherlands Inst Sea Res NIOZ Texel, Dept Ocean Syst, Den Burg, Netherlands
[3] Univ Ghent, Dept Biol, Marine Biol Res Grp, Ghent, Belgium
[4] Helmholtz Zentrum Polar & Meeresforsch, Alfred Wegener Inst, Bremerhaven, Germany
[5] Univ Appl Sci, Bremerhaven, Germany
关键词
Carbonate mound; Metabolic activity; Rockall bank; Dissolved organic carbon; Dissolved inorganic nitrogen; Suspension feeder; Video transect; ROCKALL TROUGH; LOPHELIA-PERTUSA; NE ATLANTIC; BIOEROSION PATTERNS; PORCUPINE SEABIGHT; NORTHEAST ATLANTIC; TROPHIC STRUCTURE; ORGANIC-MATTER; MOUND; CARBON;
D O I
10.1016/j.dsr.2021.103574
中图分类号
P7 [海洋学];
学科分类号
0707 ;
摘要
Cold-water coral (CWC) reefs create hotspots of metabolic activity in the deep sea, in spite of the limited supply of fresh organic matter from the ocean surface (i.e. phytodetritus). We propose that 'dead' coral framework, which harbours diverse faunal and microbial communities, boosts the metabolic activity of the reefs, through enhanced resource retention and recycling. Analysis of a video transect across a 700-540 m-deep CWC mound (Rockall Bank, North-East Atlantic) revealed a high benthic cover of dead framework (64%). Box-cored fragments of dead framework were incubated on-board and showed oxygen consumption rates of 0.078-0.182 mu mol O-2 (mmol organic carbon, i.e. OC)(-1) h(-1), indicating a substantial contribution to the total metabolic activity of the CWC reef. During the incubations, it was shown that the framework degradation stage influences nitrogen (re)cycling, corresponding to differences in community composition. New (less-degraded) framework released ammonium (0.005 +/- 0.001 mu mol NH4+ (mmol OC)(-1) h(-1)), probably due to the activity of ammonotelic macrofauna. In contrast, old (more-degraded) framework released nitrate (0.015 +/- 0.008 mu mol NO3- (mmol OC)(-1) h(-1)), indicating that nitrifying microorganisms recycled fauna-excreted ammonium to nitrate. Furthermore, the framework community removed natural dissolved organic matter (DOM) from the incubation water (0.005-0.122 mu mol C (mmol OC)(-1) h(-1)). Additional feeding experiments showed that all functional groups and macrofauna taxa of the framework community incorporated C-13-enriched ('labelled') DOM, indicating widespread DOM uptake and recycling. Finally, the framework effectively retained C-13-enriched phytodetritus, (a) by physical retention on the biofilm-covered surface and (b) by biological filtration through suspension-feeding fauna. We therefore suggest that the dead framework acts as a 'filtration-recycling factory' that enhances the metabolic activity of CWC reefs. The exposed framework, however, is particularly vulnerable to ocean acidification, jeopardizing this important aspect of CWC reef functioning.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 23 条
  • [1] Beta diversity of cold-water coral reef communities off western Scotland
    Henry, Lea-Anne
    Davies, Andrew J.
    Roberts, J. Murray
    CORAL REEFS, 2010, 29 (02) : 427 - 436
  • [2] On the paradox of thriving cold-water coral reefs in the food-limited deep sea
    Maier, Sandra R.
    Brooke, Sandra
    De Clippele, Laurence H.
    de Froe, Evert
    van Der Kaaden, Anna-Selma
    Kutti, Tina
    Mienis, Furu
    van Oevelen, Dick
    BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 2023, 98 (05) : 1768 - 1795
  • [3] Deep-sea (cold-water) coral communities of the North Pacific and problems of their conservation
    Malyutin, A. N.
    RUSSIAN JOURNAL OF MARINE BIOLOGY, 2015, 41 (01) : 1 - 9
  • [4] Trophic relationships in a deep Mediterranean cold-water coral bank (Santa Maria di Leuca, Ionian Sea)
    Carlier, A.
    Le Guilloux, E.
    Olu, K.
    Sarrazin, J.
    Mastrototaro, F.
    Taviani, M.
    Clavier, J.
    MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2009, 397 : 125 - 137
  • [5] Zooplankton drive diurnal changes in oxygen concentration at Tisler cold-water coral reef
    Guihen, Damien
    White, Martin
    Lundalv, Tomas
    CORAL REEFS, 2018, 37 (04) : 1013 - 1025
  • [6] Ecological characterisation of a Mediterranean cold-water coral reef: Cabliers Coral Mound Province (Alboran Sea, western Mediterranean)
    Corbera, Guillem
    Lo Iacono, Claudio
    Gracia, Eulalia
    Grinyo, Jordi
    Pierdomenico, Martina
    Huvenne, Veerle A. I.
    Aguilar, Ricardo
    Maria Gili, Josep
    PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 2019, 175 : 245 - 262
  • [7] Tiger reefs: Self-organized regular patterns in deep-sea cold-water coral reefs
    van der Kaaden, Anna-Selma
    Maier, Sandra R.
    Siteur, Koen
    De Clippele, Laurence H.
    van de Koppel, Johan
    Purkis, Sam J.
    Rietkerk, Max
    Soetaert, Karline
    van Oevelen, Dick
    ECOSPHERE, 2023, 14 (10):
  • [8] Fine-Scale Heterogeneity of a Cold-Water Coral Reef and Its Influence on the Distribution of Associated Taxa
    Price, David M.
    Lim, Aaron
    Callaway, Alexander
    Eichhorn, Markus P.
    Wheeler, Andrew J.
    Iacono, Claudio Lo
    Huvenne, Veerle A. I.
    FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2021, 8
  • [9] Benthic invertebrates associated with subfossil cold-water coral frames and hardgrounds in the Albanian deep waters (Adriatic Sea)
    Nasto, Ina
    Cardone, Frine
    Mastrototaro, Francesco
    Panetta, Piero
    Rosso, Antonietta
    Sanfilippo, Rosanna
    Taviani, Marco
    Tursi, Angelo
    TURKISH JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 2018, 42 (04) : 360 - 371
  • [10] Cold-water coral reef frameworks, megafaunal communities and evidence for coral carbonate mounds on the Hatton Bank, north east Atlantic
    Roberts, J. M.
    Henry, L. -A.
    Long, D.
    Hartley, J. P.
    FACIES, 2008, 54 (03) : 297 - 316