Temporal and spatial meiofauna patterns in the Nazaré Submarine Canyon, Northeast Atlantic.

Submarine canyons are characterized by highly heterogeneous habitats, topography and hydrography with enhanced organic matter input. These factors have a profound effect on canyon faunal communities in time and space. As part of the HERMES project, one of the largest European canyons, the Nazaré can...

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Main Authors: Ramalho, Sofia, Ingels, Jeroen, Adão, Helena, VanreuseL, Ann
Format: Lecture
Language:English
Published: Simpósio de Ciências Marinhas 2013" 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10174/9143
id ftunivevora:oai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/9143
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivevora:oai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/9143 2023-09-05T13:21:53+02:00 Temporal and spatial meiofauna patterns in the Nazaré Submarine Canyon, Northeast Atlantic. Ramalho, Sofia Ingels, Jeroen Adão, Helena VanreuseL, Ann 2013-06-17 http://hdl.handle.net/10174/9143 eng eng Simpósio de Ciências Marinhas 2013" http://hdl.handle.net/10174/9143 nao sim sofia.pinto.ramalho@gmail.com nd hadao@uevora.pt 367 openAccess Deep sea benthic Nematodes Nazaré Canyon Northeast Atlantic lecture 2013 ftunivevora 2023-08-14T17:32:25Z Submarine canyons are characterized by highly heterogeneous habitats, topography and hydrography with enhanced organic matter input. These factors have a profound effect on canyon faunal communities in time and space. As part of the HERMES project, one of the largest European canyons, the Nazaré canyon was sampled in spring-summer in three consecutive years (2005, 2006, 2007), permitting the study of inter-annual patterns in meiofaunal communities at two contrasting habitats at 3500 and 4300 m water depth. Meiofauna standing stocks and structural and functional diversity were investigated in relation to biogeochemical sediment data. Substantially increased sediment sand content in 2006 and consistent phytodetritus levels indicated the occurrence of one or more deposition events between the 2005 and 2006 sampling events. Nematode standing stocks and trophic diversity decreased in the 2006 samples, seemingly followed by a recovery period as observed by community patterns in 2007, when communities were strongly correlated with the increase of quality and bioavailability of the organic matter supplied. Nevertheless, inter-annual variations were not the main driver for the faunal communities; the depth effect on the faunal communities was greater. The community differences between the sampled habitats were markedly greater than what was caused by inter-annual variation, likely because of the contrasting hydrodynamic and food supply conditions. The higher meiofauna/nematode abundances, biomass, and trophic complexity at the 3500 m station, compared to the 4300 m station, was related to the higher food supply, and greater quality and bioavailability at the 3500 m site. Lecture Northeast Atlantic Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora
institution Open Polar
collection Repositório Científico da Universidade de Évora
op_collection_id ftunivevora
language English
topic Deep sea
benthic Nematodes
Nazaré Canyon
Northeast Atlantic
spellingShingle Deep sea
benthic Nematodes
Nazaré Canyon
Northeast Atlantic
Ramalho, Sofia
Ingels, Jeroen
Adão, Helena
VanreuseL, Ann
Temporal and spatial meiofauna patterns in the Nazaré Submarine Canyon, Northeast Atlantic.
topic_facet Deep sea
benthic Nematodes
Nazaré Canyon
Northeast Atlantic
description Submarine canyons are characterized by highly heterogeneous habitats, topography and hydrography with enhanced organic matter input. These factors have a profound effect on canyon faunal communities in time and space. As part of the HERMES project, one of the largest European canyons, the Nazaré canyon was sampled in spring-summer in three consecutive years (2005, 2006, 2007), permitting the study of inter-annual patterns in meiofaunal communities at two contrasting habitats at 3500 and 4300 m water depth. Meiofauna standing stocks and structural and functional diversity were investigated in relation to biogeochemical sediment data. Substantially increased sediment sand content in 2006 and consistent phytodetritus levels indicated the occurrence of one or more deposition events between the 2005 and 2006 sampling events. Nematode standing stocks and trophic diversity decreased in the 2006 samples, seemingly followed by a recovery period as observed by community patterns in 2007, when communities were strongly correlated with the increase of quality and bioavailability of the organic matter supplied. Nevertheless, inter-annual variations were not the main driver for the faunal communities; the depth effect on the faunal communities was greater. The community differences between the sampled habitats were markedly greater than what was caused by inter-annual variation, likely because of the contrasting hydrodynamic and food supply conditions. The higher meiofauna/nematode abundances, biomass, and trophic complexity at the 3500 m station, compared to the 4300 m station, was related to the higher food supply, and greater quality and bioavailability at the 3500 m site.
format Lecture
author Ramalho, Sofia
Ingels, Jeroen
Adão, Helena
VanreuseL, Ann
author_facet Ramalho, Sofia
Ingels, Jeroen
Adão, Helena
VanreuseL, Ann
author_sort Ramalho, Sofia
title Temporal and spatial meiofauna patterns in the Nazaré Submarine Canyon, Northeast Atlantic.
title_short Temporal and spatial meiofauna patterns in the Nazaré Submarine Canyon, Northeast Atlantic.
title_full Temporal and spatial meiofauna patterns in the Nazaré Submarine Canyon, Northeast Atlantic.
title_fullStr Temporal and spatial meiofauna patterns in the Nazaré Submarine Canyon, Northeast Atlantic.
title_full_unstemmed Temporal and spatial meiofauna patterns in the Nazaré Submarine Canyon, Northeast Atlantic.
title_sort temporal and spatial meiofauna patterns in the nazaré submarine canyon, northeast atlantic.
publisher Simpósio de Ciências Marinhas 2013"
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10174/9143
genre Northeast Atlantic
genre_facet Northeast Atlantic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10174/9143
nao
sim
sofia.pinto.ramalho@gmail.com
nd
hadao@uevora.pt
367
op_rights openAccess
_version_ 1776202443421384704