Inter-Research > MEPS > v199 > p31-41  
MEPS
Marine Ecology Progress Series

via Mailchimp

MEPS 199:31-41 (2000)  -  doi:10.3354/meps199031

Different benthic size-compartments and their relationship to sediment chemistry in the deep Eurasian Arctic Ocean

Ingrid Kröncke1,*, Ann Vanreusel2, Magda Vincx2, Jutta Wollenburg3, Andreas Mackensen3, Gerd Liebezeit4, Brigitte Behrends4

1Senckenberg Institute, Department for Marine Research, Schleusenstr. 39a, 26382 Wilhelmshaven, Germany
2University of Gent, Zoology Institute, Marine Biology Section, K.L. Ledeganckstraat 35, 9000 Gent, Belgium
3Alfred-Wegener-Institute for Polar and Marine Research, POB 120161, 27515 Bremerhaven, Germany
4Terramare Research Centre, Schleusenstr. 1, 26382 Wilhelmshaven, Germany

ABSTRACT: During the Arctic Expedition ARK VIII/3 (August to September 1991) with RV ŒPolarstern¹, the macrofauna, meiofauna, foraminifera, bacteria were sampled and sediment chemistry was determined at 13 stations along a transect from the Barents Sea slope across the deep Arctic Eurasian Basins towards the Lomonosov Ridge. Water depths ranged from 258 to 4427 m. In general, higher values for all benthic compartments as well as total organic carbon (TOC) and total hydrolysable amino acids (THAA) were recorded for the Barents Sea slope than for the deeper stations in the basins and the ridge slopes. The only significant correlation found was between macrofaunal abundance and depth. Bacterial and all faunal abundances as well as bacterial and macrofaunal biomass decreased significantly with increasing latitude. Although correlations between food items such as TOC and THAA and the fauna were weak, significant relationships between the bacterial and faunal size-classes reflected a distinct food chain typical of oligotrophic systems. The smallest compartments‹bacteria, meiofauna and foraminifera‹were more abundant than the macrofauna in the central Arctic Ocean. Macrofauna biomass dominated the biomass on the Barent Sea shelf and slope and on the Lomonosov Ridge, but bacterial biomass was equally or even more important on the Gakkel Ridge and in the deep basins. The results reveal the Eurasian Basin as one of the most oligotrophic regions in the World Ocean. Although primary production is low, recent foraminiferal investigations have revealed that benthic communities in the central Arctic Ocean are driven by the sedimentation of fresh organic material. Lateral transport of organic material from the Siberian shelf may provide additional food. The various benthic compartments compete either for fresh organic matter or for refractory material that is transferred to higher levels of the food chain by bacterial mineralisation.


KEY WORDS: Arctic Ocean · Deep-sea · Bacteria · Foraminifera · Meiofauna · Macrofauna · TOC · Amino acids · Chloroplastic pigments · C-flux


Full text in pdf format
 Previous article Next article