Author's personal copy Diversity and distributional patterns of Polychaeta in the deep South Atlantic

a b s t r a c t This study provides new information about the composition, diversity and zoogeography of abyssal polychaetes in the little-studied South Eastern Atlantic (Angola Basin). During the austral winter of 2000, twenty-five box core samples (total area sampled 6 m 2 ) were taken along a 500...

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Main Authors: Dieter Fiege, Patricia A Ramey, Brigitte Ebbe
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1055.7053
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spelling ftciteseerx:oai:CiteSeerX.psu:10.1.1.1055.7053 2023-05-15T18:24:55+02:00 Author's personal copy Diversity and distributional patterns of Polychaeta in the deep South Atlantic Dieter Fiege Patricia A Ramey Brigitte Ebbe The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives application/pdf http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1055.7053 en eng http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1055.7053 Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it. https://marine.rutgers.edu/pubs/private/Fiege%20et%20al%202010.pdf text ftciteseerx 2020-04-12T00:22:00Z a b s t r a c t This study provides new information about the composition, diversity and zoogeography of abyssal polychaetes in the little-studied South Eastern Atlantic (Angola Basin). During the austral winter of 2000, twenty-five box core samples (total area sampled 6 m 2 ) were taken along a 500-km transect in five work areas at depths exceeding 5000 m. A total of 1047 individuals representing 86 species belonging to 32 families was collected. Well over half the polychaetes (58 species; 67%) appear to be new to science, with the highest number of new species among the Cirratulidae, Paraonidae, Phyllodocidae, Ampharetidae, Opheliidae, and Spionidae. Eight of these new species were among the 16 dominant species in the deep Angola Basin whereas, 32 species (37%) were considered to be rare with only 1-2 individuals collected. Species accumulation curves did not level off at a fixed number of species, indicating that diversity would increase with additional sampling. Polychaete community assemblages among box core samples were highly variable. Ten of the known species are biogeographically widespread outside the Angola Basin whereas five appear to be restricted to the deep Atlantic. Two species have only been recorded in the Southern Ocean, and one in the southern hemisphere. Twenty (35%) of the species considered to be new to science were also found in samples from the deep Southern Ocean, whereas eight of the known species found in the Angola Basin have not been reported from the Southern Ocean to date. Surface deposit feeders and carnivores were the dominant functional groups both in terms of number of individuals and number of species. Necessary steps to further our knowledge of the little-known abyssal ecosystem are discussed. Text Southern Ocean Unknown Austral Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
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description a b s t r a c t This study provides new information about the composition, diversity and zoogeography of abyssal polychaetes in the little-studied South Eastern Atlantic (Angola Basin). During the austral winter of 2000, twenty-five box core samples (total area sampled 6 m 2 ) were taken along a 500-km transect in five work areas at depths exceeding 5000 m. A total of 1047 individuals representing 86 species belonging to 32 families was collected. Well over half the polychaetes (58 species; 67%) appear to be new to science, with the highest number of new species among the Cirratulidae, Paraonidae, Phyllodocidae, Ampharetidae, Opheliidae, and Spionidae. Eight of these new species were among the 16 dominant species in the deep Angola Basin whereas, 32 species (37%) were considered to be rare with only 1-2 individuals collected. Species accumulation curves did not level off at a fixed number of species, indicating that diversity would increase with additional sampling. Polychaete community assemblages among box core samples were highly variable. Ten of the known species are biogeographically widespread outside the Angola Basin whereas five appear to be restricted to the deep Atlantic. Two species have only been recorded in the Southern Ocean, and one in the southern hemisphere. Twenty (35%) of the species considered to be new to science were also found in samples from the deep Southern Ocean, whereas eight of the known species found in the Angola Basin have not been reported from the Southern Ocean to date. Surface deposit feeders and carnivores were the dominant functional groups both in terms of number of individuals and number of species. Necessary steps to further our knowledge of the little-known abyssal ecosystem are discussed.
author2 The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
format Text
author Dieter Fiege
Patricia A Ramey
Brigitte Ebbe
spellingShingle Dieter Fiege
Patricia A Ramey
Brigitte Ebbe
Author's personal copy Diversity and distributional patterns of Polychaeta in the deep South Atlantic
author_facet Dieter Fiege
Patricia A Ramey
Brigitte Ebbe
author_sort Dieter Fiege
title Author's personal copy Diversity and distributional patterns of Polychaeta in the deep South Atlantic
title_short Author's personal copy Diversity and distributional patterns of Polychaeta in the deep South Atlantic
title_full Author's personal copy Diversity and distributional patterns of Polychaeta in the deep South Atlantic
title_fullStr Author's personal copy Diversity and distributional patterns of Polychaeta in the deep South Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Author's personal copy Diversity and distributional patterns of Polychaeta in the deep South Atlantic
title_sort author's personal copy diversity and distributional patterns of polychaeta in the deep south atlantic
url http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1055.7053
geographic Austral
Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Austral
Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_source https://marine.rutgers.edu/pubs/private/Fiege%20et%20al%202010.pdf
op_relation http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.1055.7053
op_rights Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it.
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