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How realistic can we be?

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Benthic systems: Unvegetated Sediments Associations, Diversity, Disturbance ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How realistic can we be?


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Benthic systems Unvegetated Sediments
  • Associations, Diversity, Disturbance

3
Deep Sea Benthic diversity
  • In on sediments
  • Dominated by macrofauna
  • Defined by size (gt 300 µm)
  • Include polychaetes, molluscs, crustaceans,
    echinoderms
  • Estimated to include between 500,000 and
    10,000,000 species
  • Program to inventory under way (CeDAMar or
    Census of Diversity of Marine Life abyssal
    plains)

4
Ecological importance of benthic macrofauna
  • Nutrient cycling at ecosystem level
  • Food resource for commercially important species
  • Pollutant metabolism
  • Dispersion burial
  • Energy cycling
  • Influence sediment structure turnover

5
Why so many species of macrofauna?
  • Why would we expect low diversity?
  • Apparently low variety of habitats so apparently
    low number of different niches
  • Low rate of input for new energy/nutrients
  • Competitive exclusion principle predicts low
    diversity

6
What ecological mechanisms would explain high
diversity?
  • H1 Niches are defined by more dimensions than
    sediment type
  • Location within sediments (e.g., vary in O2)
  • Other organisms create biotic variation
  • H2 Competition is not a major factor
  • Predator influence
  • Disturbance influence
  • H3 Local diversity may be low but regional
    diversity can be high
  • This is multiplied by a very large area of habitat

7
Sediment variation Bioturbation
Variable sediment surface from biological
activity 1100 m
Box Core from 1900 m
8
Spatial variability in distribution of polychaetes
9
Continental Shelves overview
  • 7.4 of ocean surface
  • Average 78 km wide, 135 m deep
  • Most above water during ice ages (18k bp)

10
Topography of a typical continental shelf
11
Characteristics of the habitat
  • High productivity along continents
  • Higher turbulence than in deep ocean
  • More variable salinity and temperature
  • Light penetration usually is reduced (often to 10
    to 20 m)

12
Components
  • Infauna classified by size
  • Bacteria protozoa
  • Macro- and meiofauna
  • Major taxonomic groups
  • Polychaetes, crustacea
  • Echinoderms, molluscs
  • In similar habitats, community composition
    suggests convergence in form

13
Major questions
  • What are the major components of communities in
    unvegetated sediments?
  • What is the relationship between taxonomic
    classification and ecological function?
    (Functional equivalents)
  • How can disturbance promote diversity?
  • What are the consequences of bottom-dredging
    fishing techniques?
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