Depth-related structure and ecological significance of cold-seep communities - A case study from the Sea of Okhotsk.

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author Sahling, Heiko
dc.contributor.author Galkin, Sergey V
dc.contributor.author Salyuk, Anatoly
dc.contributor.author Greinert, Jens
dc.contributor.author Foerstel, Hilmar
dc.contributor.author Piepenburg, Dieter
dc.contributor.author Suess, Erwin
dc.coverage.spatial MEDIAN LATITUDE: 53.282753 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: 145.878710 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 48.309500 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 143.981283 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: 54.445683 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: 151.824750 * DATE/TIME START: 1998-08-16T05:30:00 * DATE/TIME END: 1999-09-14T11:26:00 * MINIMUM ELEVATION: -2500.0 m * MAXIMUM ELEVATION: -382.0 m
dc.date.accessioned 2019-11-26T02:55:09Z
dc.date.available 2019-11-26T02:55:09Z
dc.date.issued 2003-09-20
dc.identifier https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.769751
dc.identifier https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.769751
dc.identifier.citation Sahling, Heiko; Galkin, Sergey V; Salyuk, Anatoly; Greinert, Jens; Foerstel, Hilmar; Piepenburg, Dieter; Suess, Erwin (2003): Depth-related structure and ecological significance of cold-seep communities - A case study from the Sea of Okhotsk. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 50(12), 1391-1409, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2003.08.004
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/7951
dc.description.abstract We discovered and investigated several cold-seep sites in four depth zones of the Sea of Okhotsk off Northeast Sakhalin: outer shelf (160–250 m), upper slope (250–450 m), intermediate slope (450–800 m), and Derugin Basin (1450–1600 m). Active seepage of free methane or methane-rich fluids was detected in each zone. However, seabed photography and sampling revealed that the number of chemoautotrophic species decreases dramatically with decreasing water depth. At greatest depths in the Derugin Basin, the seeps were inhabited by bacterial mats and bivalves of the families Vesicomyidae (Calyptogena aff. pacifica, C. rectimargo, Archivesica sp.), Solemyidae (Acharax sp.) and Thyasiridae (Conchocele bisecta). In addition, pogonophoran tubeworms of the family Sclerolinidae were found in barite edifices. At the shallowest sites, on the shelf at 160 m, the seeps lack chemoautotrophic macrofauna; their locations were indicated only by the patchy occurrence of bacterial mats. Typical seep-endemic metazoans with chemosynthetic symbionts were confined to seep sites at depths below 370 m. A comparative analysis of the structure of seep and background communities suggests that differences in predation pressure may be an important determinant of this pattern. The abundance of predators such as carnivorous brachyurans and asteroids, which can invade seeps from adjacent habitats and efficiently prey on sessile seep bivalves, decreased very pronouncedly with depth. We conclude from the obvious correlation with the conspicuous pattern in the distribution of seep assemblages that, on the shelf and at the upper slope, predator pressure may be high enough to effectively impede any successful settlement of viable populations of seep-endemic metazoans. However, there was also evidence that other depth-related factors, such as bottom-water current, sedimentary regimes, oxygen concentrations and the supply of suitable settling substrates, may additionally regulate the distribution of seep fauna in the area. As a consequence of the pronounced pattern in the distribution of seep communities, their ecological significance as food sources of surrounding background fauna increased with water depth. Isotopic analyses suggest that in the Derugin Basin seep colonists feed on chemoautotrophic seep organisms, either directly or by preying on metazoans with chemosynthetic symbionts. In contrast, seep organisms apparently do not contribute to the nutrition of the adjacent background fauna on the shelf and at the slope. In this area, elevated epifaunal abundances at seep sites were caused primarily by the availability of suitable settling substrates rather than by an enrichment of food supply.
dc.format text/tab-separated-values, 264 data points
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher PANGAEA
dc.rights CC-BY-3.0: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported
dc.rights Access constraints: unrestricted
dc.source Supplement to: Sahling, Heiko; Galkin, Sergey V; Salyuk, Anatoly; Greinert, Jens; Foerstel, Hilmar; Piepenburg, Dieter; Suess, Erwin (2003): Depth-related structure and ecological significance of cold-seep communities - A case study from the Sea of Okhotsk. Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, 50(12), 1391-1409, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr.2003.08.004
dc.subject Akademik M.A. Lavrentyev
dc.subject Area/locality
dc.subject Dredge
dc.subject DRG
dc.subject GE99/KOMEX_VI
dc.subject GE99-25-1
dc.subject GE99-28-1
dc.subject KOMEX
dc.subject KOMEX I
dc.subject Kurile-Okhotsk Sea Marine Experiment
dc.subject LV28
dc.subject LV28-16-2
dc.subject LV28-30-2
dc.subject LV28-30-3
dc.subject LV28-30-4
dc.subject LV28-30-5
dc.subject LV28-36-1
dc.subject LV28-38-1
dc.subject LV28-47-1
dc.subject Marshal Gelovany
dc.subject Mass spectrometry
dc.subject Material
dc.subject MUC
dc.subject MultiCorer
dc.subject Obzhirov flare
dc.subject Sea of Okhotsk
dc.subject Species
dc.subject Taxon/taxa
dc.subject TRAWL
dc.subject Trawl net
dc.subject δ13C, organic carbon
dc.subject δ15N, gas
dc.title Depth-related structure and ecological significance of cold-seep communities - A case study from the Sea of Okhotsk.
dc.title.alternative (Table 3) Stable isotope composition of sof t tissues of specimens from the Sea of Okhotsk
dc.type Dataset


Files in this item

Files Size Format View

There are no files associated with this item.

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

  • PANGAEA
    Метаданные публикаций с сайта https://www.pangaea.de/

Show simple item record