Shifts in benthic megafauna communities after glacial retreat in an Antarctic fjord

Abstract Underwater imagery survey was conducted to address changes in Antarctic benthic megafauna communities by recent glacial retreat in Marian Cove, where distance from the glacier was proportional to retreat period. Benthic megafauna communities showed lesser variation due to frequent ice-scour...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Communications Earth & Environment
Main Authors: Dong-U Kim, In-Young Ahn, Junsung Noh, Changkeun Lee, Jong Seong Khim
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01607-0
https://doaj.org/article/f20c031a9f7841dd9807554c23786914
Description
Summary:Abstract Underwater imagery survey was conducted to address changes in Antarctic benthic megafauna communities by recent glacial retreat in Marian Cove, where distance from the glacier was proportional to retreat period. Benthic megafauna communities showed lesser variation due to frequent ice-scouring at 10 m than deeper seabed. At deep seabed (50–90 m), where glacier impacts decreased, benthic megafauna was scarce right in front of the glacier, but near the glacier (~10 years after seabed exposure), density peaked (128 ind. m−2) with pioneer species. At the outermost site, pioneer species were extremely limited (5 ind. m−2) while late-successional species were abundant (42 ind. m−2). Taxonomic and functional diversities peaked near the glacier and outermost site, respectively, indicating different mechanisms of structural and functional change after glacial retreat. This study showed a four-step successional process of benthic megafauna communities after glacial retreat in Antarctic nearshore: high disturbance, colonization, transition, and maturing stages.