The biodiversity and distribution of abyssal benthic foraminifera and their possible ecological roles : a synthesis across the Clarion-Clipperton Zone

Artykuł - publikacja recenzowana


Tytuł
The biodiversity and distribution of abyssal benthic foraminifera and their possible ecological roles
Podtytuł
a synthesis across the Clarion-Clipperton Zone
Odpowiedzialność
Andrew J. Gooday, Franck Lejzerowicz, Aurélie Goineau, Maria Holzmann, Olga Kamenskaya, Hiroshi Kitazato, Swee-Cheng Lim, Jan Pawlowski, Teresa Radziejewska, Zofia Stachowska, Brygida Wawrzyniak-Wydrowska
Twórcy
Sumy twórców
11 autorów
Punktacja publikacji
Osoba Dysc. Pc k m P U Pu Opis
0000-0003-4759-1306 6.7 100 2 11 100,00 0,5000 50,0000 Art.
0000-0003-3838-0347 6.7 100 2 11 100,00 0,5000 50,0000 Art.
0000-0001-7124-9231 Brak deklaracji dyscypliny
Gł. język publikacji
Angielski (English)
Data publikacji
2021
Szacowana objętość
0 (arkuszy wydawniczych)
Identyfikator DOI
10.3389/fmars.2021.634726
Adres URL
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.634726/full#fun1
Uwaga ogólna
Artykuł jest również dostępny w wersji elektronicznej, za strony internetowej czasopisma - an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY).
Uwaga ogólna
This article is part of the Research Topic: Biodiversity, Connectivity and Ecosystem Function Across the Clarion-Clipperton Zone: A Regional Synthesis for an Area Targeted for Nodule Mining.
Finansowanie
MH and JP were supported by Swiss National Science Foundation grants 31003A_179125 (MH);316030_150817 (JP)
Finansowanie
ZS, TR, and BW-W acknowledge support provided by the Polish National Science Center Grant and by the JPI Oceans Pilot Action “Ecological Effects of Deep-Sea Mining”. 2014/13/B/ST10/02996
Finansowanie
Additional support was provided by the Institute of Marine and Environmental Sciences of the University of Szczecin, Poland.
Finansowanie
Research by OK was funded by the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation, State Assignment No.0149-2019-0009 13.1902.21.0012
Finansowanie
FL was supported by an Early Postdoc Mobility Grant from the Swiss National Science Foundation . P2GEP3_171829
Finansowanie
Research conducted in the UK-1 and OMS contract areas in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone were collected as part of the ABYSSLINE project, funded by UK Seabed Resources Development Ltd.
Cechy publikacji
  • Oryginalny artykuł naukowy
  • OpenAccess
Dane OpenAccess
CC_BY - Licencja,
FINAL_PUBLISHED - Wersja tekstu,
OPEN_JOURNAL - Sposób publikacji,
AT_PUBLICATION - Moment udostępnienia,
2021-06-28 - Data udostępnienia
Słowa kluczowe
Czasopismo
Frontiers in Marine Science
( ISSN 2296-7745 )
Kraj wydania: Szwajcaria (Schweiz)
Zeszyt: vol. 8
Nr: 634726
Pobierz opis jako:
BibTeX, RIS
Data zgłoszenia do bazy Publi
2021-07-02
PBN
Wyświetl
WorkId
27406

Abstrakt

en

Benthic foraminiferal research in the North Pacific has a long history, with works published over a century ago providing important information about the taxonomy and distribution of morphospecies. These studies focused mainly on areas outside the Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ). Our knowledge of foraminiferal faunas within the CCZ originates largely from recent baseline investigations related to likely future seabed mining of the polymetallic nodule deposits. These have revealed highly diverse assemblages of sediment-dwelling morphospecies among the meiofauna and macrofauna, as well as megafaunal xenophyophores and nodule-attached fauna. Morphological analyses have been complemented by metabarcoding studies that yielded even higher numbers of molecular species (Operational Taxonomic Units - OTUs). Monothalamids, the vast majority undescribed, constitute a substantial proportion of both morphological and molecular datasets, with multichambered agglutinated and calcareous foraminifera being less common. Their importance in this abyssal (>4,000 m depth) habitat likely reflects food limitation combined with carbonate dissolution close to and below the carbonate compensation depth. Literature records, supported in a few cases by genetic data, suggest that many morphospecies found in the CCZ have wide geographical distributions across the Pacific abyss and in other oceans. At smaller spatial scales (several 100s of kilometers) there is a general uniformity in assemblage composition. Nevertheless, many morphospecies are too rare to conclude anything about their geographical distributions. Similarly, the part played by benthic foraminifera in CCZ ecosystems is largely a matter of speculation, although their abundance across different size classes suggests that it is significant. Meiofauna-sized taxa that consume freshly-deposited organic detritus may be important in carbon cycling, particularly at the shallower, more eutrophic eastern end of the CCZ. Megafaunal xenophyophores can provide habitat structure for other organisms, potentially enhancing benthic biodiversity. Foraminifera of all sizes could be among the earliest recolonisers of disturbed or redeposited sediments. Their potential contributions in terms of both ecology and biodiversity make these protists significant members of benthic communities in the CCZ.

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