Title of article :
Benthic foraminiferal responses to absence of fresh phytodetritus: A two-year experiment
Author/Authors :
Alve، نويسنده , , Elisabeth، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
9
From page :
67
To page :
75
Abstract :
Sediment and bottom water from 320 m water depth in the Skagerrak basin (NE North Sea) was maintained in the laboratory and kept unfed in the dark, at ambient temperature, for two years. Although the relative abundance of agglutinated taxa in the sediments increased at the expense of allogromiids and calcareous forms, the deprivation of fresh phytodetritus caused only a moderate change of the faunal composition of the bathyal, benthic foraminiferal assemblage (six of the seven most abundant species were the same before and after the treatment; overall similarity was 58%). Among the most common species, the halt in supply of fresh organic material promoted population growth in some (e.g., Textularia earlandi, Leptohalysis gracilis, Melonis barleeanum), some maintained their populations (e.g., Globobulimina auriculata, Liebusella goësi, Eggerelloides medius), while others (e.g., Nonionella iridea, Cassidulina laevigata, and some allogromiids, particularly Micrometula hyalostriata) nearly disappeared. The different responses probably reflect the speciesʹ relative dependence on fresh phytodetritus. Those species which could utilize food stored or produced in the sediments (e.g., bacteria and degradation products) increased or maintained their populations, whereas those dependent on fresh phytodetritus and/or associated early-decomposition products declined. In spite of these changes, the species diversity showed only a minor reduction. The overall moderate response to lack of fresh phytodetritus was probably due to the fact that the assemblage already was adapted to an environment dominated by poor quality food particles. The study illustrates that the quality of organic material has an important impact on the composition and maintenance of some benthic foraminiferal communities, that the faunal response to reduction, or even a halt, in the supply of fresh phytodetritus, is not necessarily immediate or dramatic, and that the response depends on the trophic conditions prevailing in the area when the halt occurs.
Keywords :
Survival , benthic foraminifera , Food quality , Trophic strategy , Resilience , Refractory organic material
Journal title :
Marine Micropaleontology
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Marine Micropaleontology
Record number :
2263530
Link To Document :
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