Are Antarctic suspension-feeding communities different from those elsewhere in the world?

This paper presents results of the Midterm Symposium of the SCAR programme "Ecology of the Antartic sea Ice Zone" (EASIZ).-- 13 páginas, 4 figuras, 1 tabla This paper reviews the trophic ecology of benthic suspension feeders in Antarctic shelf communities, studied within SCAR's EASIZ...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Polar Biology
Main Authors: Gili, Josep Maria, Coma, Rafael, Orejas, Covadonga, López-González, Pablo J., Zabala, Mikel
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/74978
https://doi.org/10.1007/s003000100257
Description
Summary:This paper presents results of the Midterm Symposium of the SCAR programme "Ecology of the Antartic sea Ice Zone" (EASIZ).-- 13 páginas, 4 figuras, 1 tabla This paper reviews the trophic ecology of benthic suspension feeders in Antarctic shelf communities, studied within SCAR's EASIZ Programme, in comparison with published information from other seas. Dense benthic suspension-feeder communities capture large quantities of particles and may directly regulate primary, and indirectly, secondary production in littoral food chains. Most work has been performed in temperate and tropical seas; however, little is known about suspension feeders in cold environments. Recent studies on Antarctic littoral benthic suspension feeders suggest the period of winter inactivity may last only a few weeks. This contrasts with the hypothesis that in Antarctic communities there is a prolonged period of minimal activity lasting at least 6 months during the austral winter. Results from other oceans may explain how dense benthic communities could develop under such conditions. Alternative food sources, i.e. the "fine fraction", sediment resuspension, lateral advection and efficient food assimilation may play a significant role in the development of suspension-feeder dominated, very diversified, high biomass and three-dimensionally structured communities on the Antarctic shelf Support for this work was provided by CICYT (Spanish Antartic Research Programme) grants ANT97-1533-E, ANT98-1738-E and by PhD fellowships from DAAD (A/96/13073) and the European Commission (TMR-CT97-2813) to C.O. and a RED contract from the Generalitat de Catalunya" to R.C. Peer reviewed