MEPS

Marine Ecology Progress Series

MEPS is a leading hybrid research journal on all aspects of marine, coastal and estuarine ecology. Priority is given to outstanding research that advances our ecological understanding.

Online: ISSN 1616-1599

Print: ISSN 0171-8630

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps

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Volume contents
Mar Ecol Prog Ser 162:1-10 (1998)

Black pools of death: hypoxic, brine-filled ice gouge depressions become lethal traps for benthic organisms in a shallow Arctic embayment

ABSTRACT: Numerous small (9 ± 7 m2, mean ± SD) depressions filled with dark water were found covering 14% of the shallow (<10 m) sea floor of Resolute Bay, NWT, Canada, on July 28, 1995. The water in these black pools was hypoxic, warmer, and more salineand sulfide rich than surrounding bottom water. These pools also contained high numbers of dead epibenthic species, including: shrimps, amphipods, mysids, bivalves, gastropods, sea cucumbers, and fishes. Infaunal abundance and biomass, as well as benthicchlorophyll concentrations, were significantly lower inside the black pools than in the surrounding sediments. The pools persisted until the first strong wind to occur after annual sea-ice break-up. A year later (July 1996), sulfide-rich black salinepools were again found in the same depressions as well as in new depressions formed by grounding ice during the previous summer. We hypothesize that the pools form annually, as the sea ice expels dense brine, which sinks and collects in previously formedice gouge depressions on the shallow slopes of Resolute Bay. Benthic respiration would be sufficient to drive the stratified water in the pools to anoxia in the absence of currents and turnover, resulting in microbial production of highly toxic sulfides.Once established, the pools persist as lethal traps for benthic and demersal organisms until dispersed by wind or waves after breakup of the annual ice cover.

KEYWORDS

R. G. Kvitek (Co-author)

  • Institute for Earth System Sciences & Policy, California State University Monterey Bay, Seaside, California 95039, USA

K. E. Conlan (Co-author)

  • Canadian Museum of Nature, PO Box 3443, Station D, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1P 6P4

P. J. Iampietro (Co-author)

  • Moss Landing Marine Labs, Moss Landing, California 95039, USA