Publication Date:
2016-07-14
Description:
The present study focuses on two apparent species: the giant thyasirid Conchocele bisecta (Conrad, 1849), which is the dominant species of the benthic community in a gas hydrate area with cold-water methane-rich vents at a depth of about 800 m on the slope off Paramushir Island (Kuril Islands, Sea of Okhotsk) and small unidentified thyasirid bivalves from this same community. An examination of the shell morphology of these thyasirids showed that the small bivalves were in fact young specimens of C. bisecta , characterized by a high individual and age variability. A transmission electron microscopic study of C. bisecta revealed gills with ‘Type 3’ filaments, which were extended abfrontally and had a distinct bacteriocyte zone with extracellular symbionts. The symbiotic bacteria found were spherical, similar to thiotrophic symbionts of other thyasirids. The isotopic 13 C values of C. bisecta soft tissues (from –39.6 to –33.8) were much heavier than those of methane in the Paramushir gas-hydrate area and matched the range characteristic of symbiotrophic bivalves harbouring sulphur-oxidizing chemoautotrophic bacteria. The variations in 13 C and 15 N recorded for large and small C. bisecta can be related to ontogenetic differences in life habit: small individuals are totally buried in the sediment, while large ones are half-buried. Data from fatty acid (FA) analysis indicate that sulphur-oxidizing symbionts constitute almost the entire nutrition of C. bisecta , with no significant contribution of symbiotic or free-living methanotrophs . Furthermore, neither FA nor isotopic compositions provided evidence for photosynthetic sources as food items for C. bisecta through filter feeding.
Print ISSN:
0260-1230
Electronic ISSN:
1464-3766
Topics:
Biology
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