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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The Pakistan Margin is characterised by a strong mid-water oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) that intercepts the seabed at bathyal depths (1501300 m). We investigated whether faunal abundance and diversity trends were similar among protists (foraminiferans and gromiids), metazoan macrofauna and megafauna along a transect (1401850 m water depth) across the OMZ during the 2003 intermonsoon (MarchMay) and late/post-monsoon (AugustOctober) seasons. All groups exhibited some drop in abundance in the OMZ core (250500 m water depth; O2: 0.100.13 mL/L=4.465.80 μM) but to differing degrees. Densities of foraminiferans 〉63 μm were slightly depressed at 300 m, peaked at 738 m, and were much lower at deeper stations. Foraminiferans 〉300 μm were the overwhelmingly dominant macrofaunal organisms in the OMZ core. Macrofaunal metazoans reached maximum densities at 140 m depth, with additional peaks at 850, 940 and 1850 m where foraminiferans were less abundant. The polychaete Linopherus sp. was responsible for a macrofaunal biomass peak at 950 m. Apart from large swimming animals (fish and natant decapods), metazoan megafauna were absent between 300 and 900 m (O2 〈0.140.15 mL/L=6.256.69 μM) but were represented by a huge, ophiuroid-dominated abundance peak at 1000 m (O2 0.150.18 mL/L=6.698.03 μM). Gromiid protists were confined largely to depths below 1150 m (O2 〉0.2 mL/L=8.92 μM). The progressively deeper abundance peaks for foraminiferans (〉63 μm), Linopherus sp. and ophiuroids probably represent lower OMZ boundary edge effects and suggest a link between body size and tolerance of hypoxia. Macro- and megafaunal organisms collected between 800 and 1100 m were dominated by a succession of different taxa, indicating that the lower part of the OMZ is also a region of rapid faunal change. Species diversity was depressed in all groups in the OMZ core, but this was much more pronounced for macrofauna and megafauna than for foraminiferans. Oxygen levels strongly influenced the taxonomic composition of all faunal groups. Calcareous foraminiferans dominated the seasonally and permanently hypoxic sites (136300 m); agglutinated foraminiferans were relatively more abundant at deeper stations where oxygen concentrations were 〉0.13 mL/L(=5.80 μM). Polychaetes were the main macrofaunal taxon within the OMZ; calcareous macrofauna and megafauna (molluscs and echinoderms) were rare or absent where oxygen levels were lowest. The rarity of larger animals between 300 and 700 m on the Pakistan Margin, compared with the abundant macrofauna in the OMZ core off Oman, is the most notable contrast between the two sides of the Arabian Sea. This difference probably reflects the slightly higher oxygen levels and better food quality on the western side.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 2
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    In:  EPIC3David, B., Guille, A., Féral, J.-P., Roux, M. (eds). Echinoderms through time: Proceedings of the 8th International Echinoderm Symposium, pp. 421-426
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Marine biology 136 (2000), S. 1133-1145 
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Most studies of spatial patterns of invertebrates in soft sediments have concentrated on populations of individual species. Those that examined patterns in communities have tended to employ categorical analytical techniques. Using macrofaunal abundance data from van Veen grab samples collected 20 to 100 m apart in known spatial arrangements from Scottish sea-lochs, the relationships between patterns in macrobenthic species composition and distances between samples were explored using matrix correlations in a non-parametric framework. Using a simple definition of spatial structure, i.e. that intersample distances are monotonically correlated with intersample species-similarity, spatial structure at each of seven stations was assessed using non-parametric Mantel tests based on rank-correlations. Changes in community structure were positively correlated with distance at all sites in Loch Etive, on both current-swept muddy sands and soft deep muds. Different components of the macrobenthos contributed to spatial pattern at each site. Simple spatial structure was also detectable at a muddy-sand site in Loch Creran, but neither on soft mud, nor at the soft mud site in the Firth of Lorne. The concept of rank-correlograms was introduced. These were used to examine the extent and form of spatial structure in different components of the macrobenthos at each site. Relationships between similarity and distance were neither simple nor consistent. Results were compared to previous studies which used the same data, and it was concluded that studies carried out at a particular scale, or on a particular component of the benthos, are unlikely to be successful in predicting spatial relationships at other scales or for other components of the benthos. Correlational rather than categorical analyses are recommended for exploratory studies of spatial relationships in the benthos. Analyses of the spatial structure at these seven sea-loch sites suggests that by ensuring that samples are at least 40 m apart an investigator is unlikely to underestimate variability or otherwise invalidate statistical analyses based on the use of the samples as replicates. Spacing samples up to 100 m apart may increase variability estimates, further reducing the chance of concluding that a difference exists when one does not.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract   Ophiocten gracilis is an ophiuroid found at bathyal depths in the North Atlantic Ocean. The adults show strong seasonal reproduction, with an ophiopluteus in the surface plankton. Settling postlarvae were collected in sediment traps moored at 1000 and 1400 m depth in the NE Atlantic during Julian Days 142 to 212 (May to July) in 1996. During this period, growth of postlarvae in the traps was linear and the diet consisted of phytodetritus and foraminifera. Experiments suggest that postlarvae sink at rates of up to 500 m d−1, although this may well be slower in the natural environment. The high fecundity, seasonality and high population density resulted in high fertilization success, and many of the offspring were advected outside the normal adult range, where they were able to settle but did not survive to adulthood.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Samples of the deep-sea spinulosan asteroid Hymenaster membranaceus Wyville Thomson were collected in a timeseries of 19 bottom trawls spanning the period April 1978 to October 1981 from a 2200 m-deep station in the northern Rockall Trough. The reproductive biology of this species was studied from histological sections of the gonad, and compared with that of H. gennaeus H. L. Clark which was collected in the same hauls. At first sexual development, oogonia develop in nests surrounded by small accessory cells. Previtellogenic oocytes remain in the periphery but, at maturity, oocytes ranging up to 1 100 μm fill the ovary. A variety of accessory cells pack the lumen and may be nutritive or degenerative. It appears that a small number of oocytes are spawned intermittently, but there is no evidence of overproduction and break-down of superfluous oocytes. A few large oocytes become senescent and undergo internal break-down, releasing periodic acid Schiff-positive material into the lumen. Size-frequencies of oocytes indicate that eggs may be spawned as a continuous slow release, and there is no evidence of reproductive synchrony between or within samples. On reaching maturity, males appear always to be ready to release spermatozoa. Spawning is probably stimulated by egg release during chance encounters with mature females. There is no evidence for brooding, and from the large size and yolky nature of the egg direct lecithotrophic development at or near the seabed is inferred. A limited histological study of H. gennaeus indicates that egg production is very similar, but the two species differ in the nature of the accessory cells and amorphous material filling the lumen.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Marine biology 104 (1990), S. 427-435 
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Growth bands have been found in the calcitic vertebral arm ossicles of the commonly occurring deep-sea brittle starsOphiura ljungmani Wyville Thomson andOphiomusium lymani (Lyman) (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) trawled from the Rockall Trough (N.E. Atlantic) at 2 200 and 2 900 m depth from 1973 to 1982. InOphiura ljungmani, the study of ossicle microstructure by SEM shows that growth bands reflect differences in stereom porosity and surface relief, similar to that previously found amongst shallow-water brittle stars. The pattern inOphiomusium lymani was much less clear from the microstructure, but could be revealed by heating the ossicle to 450 °C and “clearing” in xylene. The bands showed up as fine, translucent rings separated by more opaque, wider zones, perhaps reflecting differences in organic material incorporated within the calcite. Both growth-banding patterns probably reflect an annual cycle in skeletal growth rate. On this assumption, the number and spacing of the banding in the two species indicates contrasting growth strategies. WithOphiura ljungmani, a rather regular annual growth increment and perhaps shorter lifespan (up to ca. 10 yr) thanOphiomusium lymani is indicated. The latter shows a relatively wide spacing of early bands, followed by tight clustering of the outermost bands corresponding to adult sizes. This growth pattern is characteristic of species “escaping” from predation by rapid growth to relatively large adult size. AdultO. lymani probably grow slowly, some perhaps reaching 20 yr of age. Growth curves were fitted to size-at-age corresponding to measurements of the size and ordering of growth bands. These corroborate age structure previously estimated from analysis of size frequencies in time series from the stations sampled in the present study. Such skeletal growth markers should be of value in analysis of the demography of deep-sea populations.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 9
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Although the taxonomy of deep-sea protobranch bivalves is becoming better known, relatively little information is available on their reproductive biology and whether or not populations show reproductive periodicities. We have examined the reproductive biology of three common sympatric species as part of a long-term time-series of samples taken from 2900 m in the Rockall Trough from 1973 to 1983. Malletia cuneata Jeffreys, 1876 produces a maximum of 30 oocytes at any one time and these grow to a maximum size of 240 μm. Maximum fecundity of Ledella pustulosa (Jeffreys, 1876) and Yoldiella jeffreysi (Hidalgo, 1877) is 174 and 360, respectively, and both species produce an egg of ∼ 120 μm in diameter. These data indicate lecithotrophic early development in L. pustulosa and Y. jeffreysi, but direct development in M. cuneata; however, evidence from the prodissoconch length of M. cuneata suggests lecithotrophic development. L. pustulosa and Y. jeffreysi also differ from M. cuneata in having a distinct reproductive cycle with spawnout in the winter months. Both the continuously breeding M. cuneata and the seasonally breeding L. pustulosa ingest diatoms, coccoliths and foraminiferans, but whereas the diet of M. cuneata appears to be constant throughout the year there is an apparent reduction in the feeding activity of L. pustulosa concomitant with the deposition of phytodetritus on the deep-sea bed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 10
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Marine biology 114 (1992), S. 607-616 
    ISSN: 1432-1793
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Growth of the European edible sea urchin Echinus esculentus L. was studied in a population held for 2 yr in cages on the sea bed, after labelling with the skeletal growth marker tetracycline. The final position of the tetracycline tag on the genital plates agreed with an annual periodicity in natural growth zones; two such growth zones appeared beyond the position of the tag on the ground surface of the plate as light-reflecting bands separated by narrow dark lines in the middle layer. Individual and group (pooled data) growth parameters were estimated from the growth increment shown in the genital plate, whose lateral growth displayed a linear relationship to the diameter of the urchin test within the size range of these measurements. Von Bertalanffy growth parameters (asymptotic size and growth-rate function K) fitted to the growth increment on each individual were highly significantly correlated to those fitted to the natural growth lines, assuming an annual periodicity. The inferred growth pattern agrees well with conclusions based on H. B. Moore's growth-band data. The caged urchins can be assumed to have experienced exactly similar conditions, yet the growth curves fitted to individuals showed considerable variability. The good agreement between estimated growth function parameters of individuals obtained by the two methods indicate that this reflects real variability in growth between individuals that probably is genetically rather than environmentally determined. The growth of E. esculentus, and the adaptational significance of high growth variability in the population is briefly discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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