Diversity of Marine Sponges in the Northwest Atlantic

This study documents the marine sponge fauna (Phylum Porifera) in the Northwest Atlantic, through the used of fishermen’s local ecological knowledge, fisheries observer data, trawl survey data and in situ exploration. A review of the role of structural benthic species, including ascidians, bryozoans...

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Main Author: Fuller, Susanna Drake
Other Authors: Department of Biology, Doctor of Philosophy, Dr. Evan Edinger, Dr. Alan Pinder, Dr. Boris Worm, Dr. Anna Metaxas, Dr. Jeff Hutchings, Dr. Ransom Myers, Not Applicable
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10222/13454
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spelling ftdalhouse:oai:DalSpace.library.dal.ca:10222/13454 2024-06-02T08:02:02+00:00 Diversity of Marine Sponges in the Northwest Atlantic Fuller, Susanna Drake Department of Biology Doctor of Philosophy Dr. Evan Edinger Dr. Alan Pinder Dr. Boris Worm Dr. Anna Metaxas Dr. Jeff Hutchings, Dr. Ransom Myers Not Applicable 2011-04-25T12:28:53Z http://hdl.handle.net/10222/13454 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10222/13454 Sponge Atlantic benthic community 2011 ftdalhouse 2024-05-06T11:40:24Z This study documents the marine sponge fauna (Phylum Porifera) in the Northwest Atlantic, through the used of fishermen’s local ecological knowledge, fisheries observer data, trawl survey data and in situ exploration. A review of the role of structural benthic species, including ascidians, bryozoans, corals, hydroids and sponges as ecosystem engineers provides the context within which to discuss the contribution of sponges to seafloor habitat heterogeneity. Fishermen’s knowledge is useful in identifying areas of high concentration of benthic structural species, but is not particularly useful in determining the distribution of specific sponge species, with the exception of glass sponges, with the common name “Russian Hat”. Fisheries observer data from the Scotia Fundy Region and trawl survey data from the Newfoundland Region were obtained from the years 1977-2001 and 1973-2007 respectively. Despite the lack of systematic collection of information on sponge catches, prior to 2002, the information recorded show broad scale patterns of sponge distribution from the Scotian Shelf to the Eastern Arctic, and this thesis brings this information together for the first time. The move to deeper and more northern waters following the groundfish collapse in 1992 resulted in large catches of sponges, up to 5000kg per set, on the Labrador Shelf and Eastern Arctic. The combination of fishermen’s information, observer data and in situ research on the Scotian Shelf resulted in the identification of a previously undescribed and globally unique population of Vazella pourtalesi, a Hexactinellid sponge, in the Family Rossellidae. The impacts of fishing on the sponge community of the Gulf of Maine were examined by quantifying the sponge community inside and outside of the Western Gulf of Maine Closed Area. After two years, the sponge community within the closed area was dominated by the demosponge, Iophon sp. while the area that remained open to fishing had a higher diversity of sponges. The information presented in this thesis can ... Other/Unknown Material Arctic Newfoundland Northwest Atlantic Glass sponges Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository Arctic Labrador Shelf ENVELOPE(-58.000,-58.000,56.000,56.000) Newfoundland
institution Open Polar
collection Dalhousie University: DalSpace Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftdalhouse
language English
topic Sponge
Atlantic
benthic community
spellingShingle Sponge
Atlantic
benthic community
Fuller, Susanna Drake
Diversity of Marine Sponges in the Northwest Atlantic
topic_facet Sponge
Atlantic
benthic community
description This study documents the marine sponge fauna (Phylum Porifera) in the Northwest Atlantic, through the used of fishermen’s local ecological knowledge, fisheries observer data, trawl survey data and in situ exploration. A review of the role of structural benthic species, including ascidians, bryozoans, corals, hydroids and sponges as ecosystem engineers provides the context within which to discuss the contribution of sponges to seafloor habitat heterogeneity. Fishermen’s knowledge is useful in identifying areas of high concentration of benthic structural species, but is not particularly useful in determining the distribution of specific sponge species, with the exception of glass sponges, with the common name “Russian Hat”. Fisheries observer data from the Scotia Fundy Region and trawl survey data from the Newfoundland Region were obtained from the years 1977-2001 and 1973-2007 respectively. Despite the lack of systematic collection of information on sponge catches, prior to 2002, the information recorded show broad scale patterns of sponge distribution from the Scotian Shelf to the Eastern Arctic, and this thesis brings this information together for the first time. The move to deeper and more northern waters following the groundfish collapse in 1992 resulted in large catches of sponges, up to 5000kg per set, on the Labrador Shelf and Eastern Arctic. The combination of fishermen’s information, observer data and in situ research on the Scotian Shelf resulted in the identification of a previously undescribed and globally unique population of Vazella pourtalesi, a Hexactinellid sponge, in the Family Rossellidae. The impacts of fishing on the sponge community of the Gulf of Maine were examined by quantifying the sponge community inside and outside of the Western Gulf of Maine Closed Area. After two years, the sponge community within the closed area was dominated by the demosponge, Iophon sp. while the area that remained open to fishing had a higher diversity of sponges. The information presented in this thesis can ...
author2 Department of Biology
Doctor of Philosophy
Dr. Evan Edinger
Dr. Alan Pinder
Dr. Boris Worm
Dr. Anna Metaxas
Dr. Jeff Hutchings, Dr. Ransom Myers
Not Applicable
author Fuller, Susanna Drake
author_facet Fuller, Susanna Drake
author_sort Fuller, Susanna Drake
title Diversity of Marine Sponges in the Northwest Atlantic
title_short Diversity of Marine Sponges in the Northwest Atlantic
title_full Diversity of Marine Sponges in the Northwest Atlantic
title_fullStr Diversity of Marine Sponges in the Northwest Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Diversity of Marine Sponges in the Northwest Atlantic
title_sort diversity of marine sponges in the northwest atlantic
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10222/13454
long_lat ENVELOPE(-58.000,-58.000,56.000,56.000)
geographic Arctic
Labrador Shelf
Newfoundland
geographic_facet Arctic
Labrador Shelf
Newfoundland
genre Arctic
Newfoundland
Northwest Atlantic
Glass sponges
genre_facet Arctic
Newfoundland
Northwest Atlantic
Glass sponges
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10222/13454
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