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Geochemistry, faunal composition and trophic structure in reducing sediments on the southwest South Georgia margin
Bell, J.B.; Aquilina, A.; Woulds, C.; Glover, A.G.; Little, C.T.S.; Reid, W.D.K.; Hepburn, L.E.; Newton, J.; Mills, R.A. (2016). Geochemistry, faunal composition and trophic structure in reducing sediments on the southwest South Georgia margin. Royal Society Open Science 3(9): 160284. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsos.160284
In: Royal Society Open Science. The Royal Society: London. ISSN 2054-5703; e-ISSN 2054-5703, meer
Peer reviewed article  

Beschikbaar in  Auteurs 

Trefwoord
    Marien/Kust
Author keywords
    methane; Southern Ocean; ecology; assemblage composition;trophodynamics; authigenic carbonates

Auteurs  Top 
  • Bell, J.B.
  • Aquilina, A.
  • Woulds, C.
  • Glover, A.G., meer
  • Little, C.T.S.
  • Reid, W.D.K.
  • Hepburn, L.E.
  • Newton, J.
  • Mills, R.A.

Abstract
    Despite a number of studies in areas of focused methane seepage, the extent of transitional sediments of more diffuse methane seepage, and their influence upon biological communities is poorly understood. We investigated an area of reducing sediments with elevated levels of methane on the South Georgia margin around 250 m depth and report data from a series of geochemical and biological analyses. Here, the geochemical signatures were consistent with weak methane seepage and the role of sub-surface methane consumption was clearly very important, preventing gas emissions into bottom waters. As a result, the contribution of methane-derived carbon to the microbial and metazoan food webs was very limited, although sulfur isotopic signatures indicated a wider range of dietary contributions than was apparent from carbon isotope ratios. Macrofaunal assemblages had high dominance and were indicative of reducing sediments, with many taxa common to other similar environments and no seep-endemic fauna, indicating transitional assemblages. Also similar to other cold seep areas, there were samples of authigenic carbonate, but rather than occurring as pavements or sedimentary concretions, these carbonates were restricted to patches on the shells of Axinulus antarcticus (Bivalvia, Thyasiridae), which is suggestive of microbe–metazoan interactions.

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