4.2 Article

Deep-sea amphipod community structure across abyssal to hadal depths in the Peru-Chile and Kermadec trenches

Journal

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 492, Issue -, Pages 125-138

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps10489

Keywords

Amphipoda; Hadal zone; Community structure; Peru-Chile Trench; Kermadec Trench; Pacific Ocean

Funding

  1. Nippon Foundation, Japan [2009765188]
  2. Natural Environmental Research Council, UK [NE/E007171/1]
  3. Marine Alliance for Science and Technology for Scotland (MASTS) pooling initiative
  4. Ministry for Business, Innovation and Education [CO1X0906]
  5. NIWA Capability Fund [CF113354]
  6. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/E007171/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  7. NERC [NE/E007171/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Deep-sea necrophagous amphipods were sampled from 5 stations across the abyssal and hadal zones (4602 to 8074 m depth) of the Peru-Chile Trench (SE Pacific Ocean) and combined with comparative data taken from 7 stations at corresponding depths (4329 to 7966 m) in the Kermadec Trench (SW Pacific Ocean) to investigate the diversity and structure of the amphipod communities in the South Pacific Ocean. Four distinctive community groups were identified and their relationships with environmental factors were examined using a total of 6 variables (latitude, longitude, hydrostatic pressure, primary productivity, temperature, sediment characteristics), of which pressure (i.e. depth) and longitudinal (i.e. geographic isolation or dispersal distance) gradients best explained the observed variation in the amphipod assemblage structure. The composition of the abyssal community was dominated by cosmopolitan species belonging to the genera Paralicella, Abyssorchomene and Eurythenes. The 2 most dissimilar groups corresponded to the sites at deeper, hadal depths in both trenches: the hadal Kermadec sites (6890 to 7966 m), dominated by Hirondellea dubia, and the hadal Peru-Chile sites (7050 to 8074 m), characterised by the presence of E. gryllus and 3 undescribed Hirondellea species. The number of amphipod species decreased significantly with increasing depth across all the sampling stations, but the decreasing trend diverged markedly between the 2 hadal trench communities, possibly due to the stark contrast in overlying surface productivity between the 2 regions. Thus the environmental forcing exerted by the pressure and longitudinal gradients on the scavenging amphipod community structure is likely to be further influenced by the surface production and associated flux of food material to the trenches.

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