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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-05-12
    Keywords: Antarctica; Area/locality; Habitat; Scotia-Weddell; Species richness; Standard error
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 25 data points
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-07-10
    Keywords: Antarctica; Area/locality; Bryozoa; Habitat; Isopoda; Ostracoda; Scotia-Weddell
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 40 data points
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  • 3
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    In:  Supplement to: Kaiser, Stefanie; Griffiths, Huw James; Barnes, David K A; Brandão, Simone N; Brandt, Angelika; O'Brien, Philip E (2011): Is there a distinct continental slope fauna in the Antarctic? Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 58(1-2), 91-104, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2010.05.017
    Publication Date: 2023-12-13
    Description: The Antarctic continental slope spans the depths from the shelf break (usually between 500 and 1000 m) to ~3000 m, is very steep, overlain by 'warm' (2-2.5 °C) Circumpolar Deep Water (CDW), and life there is poorly studied. This study investigates whether life on Antarctica's continental slope is essentially an extension of the shelf or the abyssal fauna, a transition zone between these or clearly distinct in its own right. Using data from several cruises to the Weddell Sea and Scotia Sea, including the ANDEEP (ANtarctic benthic DEEP-sea biodiversity, colonisation history and recent community patterns) I-III, BIOPEARL (Biodiversity, Phylogeny, Evolution and Adaptive Radiation of Life in Antarctica) 1 and EASIZ (Ecology of the Antarctic Sea Ice Zone) II cruises as well as current databases (SOMBASE, SCAR-MarBIN), four different taxa were selected (i.e. cheilostome bryozoans, isopod and ostracod crustaceans and echinoid echinoderms) and two areas, the Weddell Sea and the Scotia Sea, to examine faunal composition, richness and affinities. The answer has important ramifications to the link between physical oceanography and ecology, and the potential of the slope to act as a refuge and resupply zone to the shelf during glaciations. Benthic samples were collected using Agassiz trawl, epibenthic sledge and Rauschert sled. By bathymetric definition, these data suggest that despite eurybathy in some of the groups examined and apparent similarity of physical conditions in the Antarctic, the shelf, slope and abyssal faunas were clearly separated in the Weddell Sea. However, no such separation of faunas was apparent in the Scotia Sea (except in echinoids). Using a geomorphological definition of the slope, shelf-slope-abyss similarity only changed significantly in the bryozoans. Our results did not support the presence of a homogenous and unique Antarctic slope fauna despite a high number of species being restricted to the slope. However, it remains the case that there may be a unique Antarctic slope fauna, but the paucity of our samples could not demonstrate this in the Scotia Sea. It is very likely that various ecological and evolutionary factors (such as topography, water-mass and sediment characteristics, input of particulate organic carbon (POC) and glaciological history) drive slope distinctness. Isopods showed greatest species richness at slope depths, whereas bryozoans and ostracods were more speciose at shelf depths; however, significance varied across Weddell Sea and Scotia Sea and depending on bathymetric vs. geomorphological definitions. Whilst the slope may harbour some source populations for localised shelf recolonisation, the absence of many shelf species, genera and even families (in a poorly dispersing taxon) from the continental slope indicate that it was not a universal refuge for Antarctic shelf fauna.
    Keywords: Antarctica; International Polar Year (2007-2008); IPY; Scotia-Weddell
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-03-18
    Description: Peracarid abundance and composition were studied in the Atlantic Sector of the Southern Ocean and the Weddell Sea at a depth range of 403-2021 m. Samples were collected using an epibenthic sledge (EBS) during expeditions on board the RRS James Clarke Ross in the Filchner Trough (JR275), the South Orkney Islands (JR15005), the Prince Gustav Channel (JR17003a) and on board the RV Polarstern in the Eastern Antarctic Peninsula (PS118). Expeditions took place in February-March 2012, 2016, 2018 and 2019 respectively. Since the trawling distance between stations was not always the same, in order to make data comparable between different stations, numbers of individuals were standardized to 1000 m haul distances. In total 64766 peracarids were found and sorted into five different orders (Amphipoda, Cumacea, Isopoda, Mysidacea and Tanaidacea). Amphipods were the most abundant group representing the 32% of the total abundances. The Filchner Trough had the highest abundance of peracarids, while the South Orkney Islands showed the lowest abundance compared to other areas.
    Keywords: Amphipoda; Basis of event; Cruise/expedition; crustacea; Cumacea; Date/Time of event; EBS; Elevation of event; Elevation of event 2; Epibenthic sledge; Event label; Haul length; Isopoda; James Clark Ross; JR15005; JR15005_103; JR15005_115; JR15005_12; JR15005_133; JR15005_18; JR15005_27; JR15005_34; JR15005_57; JR15005_86; JR17003A; JR17003a_34; JR17003a_35; JR17003a_47; JR17003a_5; JR17003a_53; JR20120207; JR20120207_23; JR20120207_40; JR20120207_45; JR20120207_50; JR20120207_78; JR20120207_83; JR20120207_89; JR20120207_94; JR20120207_99; JR255B JR259, JR275; Latitude of event; Latitude of event 2; Location; Longitude of event; Longitude of event 2; Method/Device of event; Mysidacea; Peracarida; Polarstern; Prince Gustav Channel; PS118; PS118_12-7; PS118_38-9; PS118_6-5; PS118_6-6; PS118_9-5; Station label; Tanaidacea; Weddell Sea
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 252 data points
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: When pelagic organisms die and fall onto the deep-sea floor they create food falls, parcels of organic enrichment that subsidize deep benthic scavenging communities. The diversity and quantities of food falls remains unstudied for many ocean regions, since they are stochastically deposited and rapidly scavenged. The Southern Ocean habitat supports large populations of megafauna but few food falls have been documented. To investigate the diversity and quantity of food falls in the northwestern Weddell Sea we analyzed 8476 deep-sea floor images that were captured during the expedition PS118 on RV Polarstern in 2019 by the camera system OFOBS (Ocean Floor Observation and Bathymetry System). OFOBS was towed 1.5 m above the seafloor along five transects (400 to 2200 m seafloor depth) east of the Antarctic Peninsula. We observed the carcasses of one baleen whale, one penguin, and four fish at depths of 647 m, 613 m, 647 m, 2136 m, 2165 m, and 2112 m, respectively, as well as associated scavenging fauna. To the best of our knowledge, we describe here the first in situ observations of deep-sea food falls for penguins and fish in the Southern Ocean. While the whale carcass seemed in an intermediate successional stage, both the penguin and the fish were likely recently deposited and three of the fish potentially resulted from fishery discards. Our relatively small data set suggests that a diverse array of food falls provide nutrients to the slopes of the Powell Basin.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Format: archive
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