Title: Deep Sea Biology
1Deep Sea Biology
- Life under the photic zone
2Our knowledge of deep-sea systems is recent and
incomplete
- Not lifeless as thought 200 years ago
- Shells first dredged from abyss in 1846
- Challenger expedition, 1873-1876
- Animals from 5500 m
- 1967 first quantitative measure of deep sea
diversity by Hessler Sanders - 2006 Venter sampling of microorganisms
3Microbial diversity in pelagic ecosystems
We estimate there are at least 25,000 different
kinds of microbes per litre of seawater, says
Sogin. But I wouldn't be surprised if it turns
out there are 100,000 or more.
4What are the questions?
- What are the environmental challenges?
- What adaptations are expressed?
- What influences diversity?
- How are ecosystems altered by exploitation?
5Definitions and limits
- Deep sea all environments below the
compensation depth (below Photic Zone) - Up to 10,000 m
- Water column Benthic habitats
- Some organisms are depth specialists but others
move gt 1,000 m vertically
6Most important gradients in environment
- Source of light switches from ambient to biotic
- Pressure increases 1 atmosphere for each 10 m of
depth - Density of food for filter feeders declines until
collected on and in sediments - Depth of minimum oxygen is at intermediate depths
(oxygen minimum)
7Adaptations to gradient in light
- Countershading to reduce silhouette against
overhead ambient light - More red pigments or translucent
- Bioluminescence
- signaling (mating deception)
- food location
- defensive
- More dependence on other sensory modalities
8Adaptations to decreasing light, cont.
- Eye structure
- mesopelagic large relative to body size
- bathyal small eyes or blind
9Consequences of changing pressure
- Difficulties in conducting experiments and
observing organisms - How do we know?
- Enzyme efficiency can be pressure sensitive
- protein stability varies with pressure
- Lipid fluidity varies with pressure
- Calcium carbonate solubility increases with
pressure
10Pressure-dependent growth experiment
11Patterns in food density
- In water column, average amount of biomass
declines with depth - At bottom, marine snow accumulates
- Average particle size varies, with increasing
patchiness with depth - EXCEPT for ecosystems that are dominated by
chemosynthetic bacteria - vent ecosystems
- cold seep ecosystems
12Deep Sea food sources
13Consequences of lower food density to organisms
(reproductive)
- Decreasing densities of populations
- consequences for finding mates, sociality
- Decreasing availability of food for offspring
- migrations to surface waters, or . . .
- delayed reproduction smaller repro effort
- more parental care
- slow embryological development
14Example of reproductive migration
15Consequences of lower food density to organisms
(ecological physiological)
- Tendency for smaller body size as depth increases
(but reversed for bathyal spp.) - Chemosensory acute to locate patchy food
- Large mouths to use wide range of food
- Lower metabolic rates (reduced mobility)
- but high mobility for bathyal species
- Slow growth, but high longevity
- How does this influence sustainable yield?
16Deep sea benthos characteristics
- Early sampling limited by technology
- Suggested low density
- Suggested low diversity
- Increasing sampling intensity with less damage
- Low density generally was correct
- But High Diversity
17Deep Sea Benthic diversity
- In on sediments
- Dominated by macrofauna
- Defined by size (gt 300 µm but too small to be
identified by photographs) - Include polychaetes, molluscs, crustaceans,
echinoderms - Estimated to include between 500,000 and
10,000,000 species - Program to inventory under way (CeDAMar or
Census of Diversity of Marine Life)
18Ecological importance of macrofauna
- Nutrient cycling at ecosystem level
- Food resource for commercially important species
- Pollutant metabolism
- Dispersion bural
- Energy cycling
- Influence sediment structure turnover
19Why so many species of macrofauna?
- Why would we expect low diversity?
- Apparently low variety of habitats so apparently
low number of different niches - Low rate of input for new energy/nutrients
- Competitive exclusion principle predicts low
diversity
20What ecological mechanisms would explain high
diversity?
- H1 Niches are defined by more dimensions than
sediment type - Location within sediments (e.g., vary in O2)
- Other organisms create biotic variation
- H2 Competition is not a major factor
- Predator influence
- Disturbance influence
- H3 Local diversity may be low but regional
diversity can be high - This is multiplied by a very large area of habitat
21Sediment variation Bioturbation
Variable sediment surface from biological
activity 1100 m
Box Core from 1900 m
22Spatial variability in distribution of polychaetes
23Deep Sea Biology
- Limits and consequences, II