Follow-up of the sponge and asteroid populations at the station Larsen A south (PS69/724-1 and PS77/253-1), Antarctic Peninsula, between 2007 and 2011
Cobertura |
MEDIAN LATITUDE: -64.912420 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: -60.655500 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: -64.913670 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: -60.660000 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: -64.911170 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: -60.651000 * DATE/TIME START: 2011-03-11T10:45:20 * DATE/TIME END: 2011-03-11T14:14:58 |
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Data(s) |
01/04/2013
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Resumo |
Over 30% of the Antarctic continental shelf is permanently covered by floating ice shelves, providing aphotic conditions for a depauperate fauna sustained by laterally advected food. In much of the remaining Antarctic shallows (<300 m depth), seasonal sea-ice melting allows a patchy primary production supporting rich megabenthic communities dominated by glass sponges (Porifera, Hexactinellida). The catastrophic collapse of ice shelves due to rapid regional warming along the Antarctic Peninsula in recent decades has exposed over 23,000 km**2 of seafloor to local primary production. The response of the benthos to this unprecedented flux of food is, however, still unknown. In 2007, 12 years after disintegration of the Larsen A ice shelf, a first biological survey interpreted the presence of hexactinellids as remnants of a former under-ice fauna with deep-sea characteristics. Four years later, we revisited the original transect, finding 2- and 3-fold increases in glass sponge biomass and abundance, respectively, after only two favorable growth periods. Our findings, along with other long-term studies, suggest that Antarctic hexactinellids, locked in arrested growth for decades, may undergo boom-and-bust cycles, allowing them to quickly colonize new habitats. The cues triggering growth and reproduction in Antarctic glass sponges remain enigmatic. |
Formato |
application/zip, 3 datasets |
Identificador |
https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.809446 doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.809446 |
Idioma(s) |
en |
Publicador |
PANGAEA |
Relação |
Fillinger, Laura; Funke, Tobias (2013): 3D models created from ROV videos and their corresponding subtransect dimensions. doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.803844 Gutt, Julian (2012): Sea-bottom video at ROV station PS69/724-1, Larsen-A, full length. © AWI/MARUM, University of Bremen, doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.804201 Gutt, Julian; Barratt, Iain; Domack, Eugene W; d'Udekem d'Acoz, Cédric; Dimmler, Werner; Grémare, Antoine; Heilmayer, Olaf; Isla, Enrique; Janussen, Dorte; Jorgensen, Elaina; Kock, Karl-Hermann; Lehnert, Linn Sophia; López-Gonzáles, Pablo José; Langner, Stephanie; Linse, Katrin; Manjón-Cabeza, Maria Eugenia; Meißner, Meike; Montiel, Américo; Raes, Maarten; Robert, Henri; Rose, Armin; Schepisi, Elisabet Sañé; Saucède, Thomas; Scheidat, Meike; Schenke, Hans Werner; Seiler, Jan; Smith, Craig (2010): Sea-bed photographs (benthos) along ROV profile PS69/724-1. © AWI/MARUM, University of Bremen, doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.702069 |
Direitos |
CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Access constraints: unrestricted |
Fonte |
Supplement to: Fillinger, Laura; Janussen, Dorte; Lundälv, Tomas; Richter, Claudio (2013): Rapid Glass Sponge Expansion after Climate-Induced Antarctic Ice Shelf Collapse. Current Biology, 23(14), 1330-1334, doi:10.1016/j.cub.2013.05.051 |
Palavras-Chave | #AWI_BPP; Bentho-Pelagic Processes @ AWI; Calculated; CTD, Saiv SD204, mounted on ROV; Date/Time; DATE/TIME; Date/time end; Date/time start; DEPTH, water; Depth water; File name; File size; MOV; video only; Warning! Files are very big. Do not open with your browser, use right click to save file to disk.; O2; O2 sat; Oxygen; Oxygen saturation; PSU; Sal; Salinity; Ship time; Temp; Temperature, water; Uniform resource locator/link to file; Uniform resource locator/link to movie; URL file; URL movie; Video time |
Tipo |
Dataset |