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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2000-01-01
    Print ISSN: 0967-0645
    Electronic ISSN: 1879-0100
    Topics: Biology , Geosciences , Physics
    Published by Elsevier
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-05-28
    Description: The effect of methane released from decomposing surficial gas hydrates (SGH) on standing stocks and activities of the small-sized benthic biota (SSBB; i.e. bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and meiobenthic organisms) was studied at about 790 m water depth, at the Hydrate Ridge, Cascadia subduction zone. Presence of SGH and elevated sulfide concentrations in the sediment were indicated by extensive bacterial mats of Beggiatoa sp. and clam fields of the bivalve mollusc Calyptogena sp. Vertical and horizontal distribution patterns of the SSBB biomass were derived from DNA and total adenylate (TA) sediment assays. Potential bacterial exoenzymatic hydrolytic activity was measured using fluorescein-di-acetate (FDA) as substrate. Estimates of chemoautotrophic production of particulate organic carbon (POC.) were determined by 14CO2 uptake incubations. Inventories of chl a and pheopigments were determined as parameters of surface water primary produced POC input. Average SSBB biomass in clam field sediments integrated over the upper 10 cm (765.2 gC m-2, SD 190.1) was 3.6 times higher than in the adjacent control sites (213 gC m-2, SD 125). Average SSBB biomass in bacterial mat sediments, which were almost devoid of eukaryotic organisms 〉 31 µm, was 209 gC m-2 (SD 65). Significant correlations between FDA, DNA and plant pigments imply that productivity of the SSBB at SGH sites is only partially uncoupled from the primary production of the surface water. Areal estimates of autotrophic Corg production at control sites, bacterial mat sites and in clam field sites were 5.7, 59.7 and 190.0 mgC m-2 d-1, respectively. Based on different models predicting vertical POC fluxes from surface water primary production and water depth, these autotrophic POC productions account for 5 to 17% (controls), 35 to 68% (bacterial mats), and 63 to 87% (clam fields) of the bulk POC (sum of allochthonous POC input through the water column and sedimentary autochthonous autotrophic POC production) provided at the various sites. At SGH sites inventories of chl a and pheopigments, integrated over the upper 10 cm of the sediment, were half of that found at the control sites. This might be due to enhanced degradation of phytodetritally associated organic matter. The resulting low molecular weight organic carbon compounds might stimulate and fuel sulfate reduction, which is conducted in a microbial consortium with anaerobic methane consuming archaea. This syntrophic consortium might represent a prominent interface between gas hydrate derived carbon and allochthonous Corg flow. We infer that degradation kinetics of SGH is affected by, e.g., seasonally varying input of allochthonous organic matter.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    Pergamon Press
    In:  Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 47 (14). pp. 2805-2833.
    Publication Date: 2020-08-05
    Description: As part of the large-scale, interdisciplinary deep-sea study “BIGSET”, the relationship between the monsoon-induced regional and temporal variability of POC deposition and the small-sized benthic community was investigated at several sites 2316–4420 m deep in the Arabian Sea during four cruises between 1995 and 1998. Vertical and horizontal distribution patterns of chloroplastic pigments (a measure of phytodetritus deposition), readily soluble protein and activity, and biomass parameters of the small-sized benthic community (Electron Transport System Activity (ETSA); bacterial ectoenzymatic activity (FDA turnover) and DNA concentrations) were measured concurrently with the vertical fluxes of POC and chloroplastic pigments. Sediment chlorophyll a (chl. a) profiles were used to calculate chl. a flux rates and to estimate POC flux across the sediment water interface using two different transport reaction models. These estimates were compared with corresponding flux rates determined in sediment traps. Regional variability of primary productivity and POC deposition at the deep-sea floor creates a trophic gradient in the Arabian Basin from the NW to the SE, which is primarily related to the activity of monsoon winds and processes associated with the topography of the Arabian Basin and the vicinity of land masses. Inventories of sediment chloroplastic pigments closely corresponded to this trophic gradient. For ETSA, FDA and DNA, however, no clear coupling was found, although stations WAST (western Arabian Sea) and NAST (northern Arabian Sea) were characterised by high concentrations and activities. These parameters exhibited high spatial and temporal variability, making it impossible to recognise clear mechanisms controlling temporal and spatial community patterns of the small-sized benthic biota. Nevertheless, the entire Arabian Basin was recognised as being affected by monsoonal activity. Comparison of two different transport reaction models indicates that labile chl. a buried in deeper sediment layers may escape rapid degradation in Arabian deep-sea sediments.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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