Nematode community structure along a Mediterranean shelf-slope gradient

Nematode assemblages along a Mediterranean depth transect (160- 1220 m) and vertically in the sediment were investigated. The station at the edge of the continental shelf (160 m) was distinctly different from those situated on the continental slope (280-1220 m). On the slope, nematode communities in...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Ecology
Main Authors: Soetaert, K.E.R., Vincx, M., Heip, C.H.R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1995
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pure.knaw.nl/portal/en/publications/dde79719-336a-4184-b270-cde65df546f1
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0485.1995.tb00405.x
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11755/dde79719-336a-4184-b270-cde65df546f1
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Summary:Nematode assemblages along a Mediterranean depth transect (160- 1220 m) and vertically in the sediment were investigated. The station at the edge of the continental shelf (160 m) was distinctly different from those situated on the continental slope (280-1220 m). On the slope, nematode communities in the upper centimetre differed significantly from communities in the deeper sediment layers, which were dominated by fewer and larger species. Vertical segregation could be a factor explaining the coexistence of several species belonging to the genus Sabatieria, with larger species penetrating deeper into the sediment. Clear differences in buccal morphology suggest food resource partitioning as the dominant factor promoting coexistence of several species belonging to the other dominant genus, Acantholaimus. [KEYWORDS: meiofauna; nematodes; deep-sea;Mediterranean Deep-sea transect; marine nematodes; calvi corsica; species-diversity; north-carolina; norwegian sea; assemblages; meiobenthos; size; desmoscolecidae] Nematode assemblages along a Mediterranean depth transect (160- 1220 m) and vertically in the sediment were investigated. The station at the edge of the continental shelf (160 m) was distinctly different from those situated on the continental slope (280-1220 m). On the slope, nematode communities in the upper centimetre differed significantly from communities in the deeper sediment layers, which were dominated by fewer and larger species. Vertical segregation could be a factor explaining the coexistence of several species belonging to the genus Sabatieria, with larger species penetrating deeper into the sediment. Clear differences in buccal morphology suggest food resource partitioning as the dominant factor promoting coexistence of several species belonging to the other dominant genus, Acantholaimus. [KEYWORDS: meiofauna; nematodes; deep-sea;Mediterranean Deep-sea transect; marine nematodes; calvi corsica; species-diversity; north-carolina; norwegian sea; assemblages; meiobenthos; size; desmoscolecidae]