4.6 Article

Impact of Bottom Trawling on Deep-Sea Sediment Properties along the Flanks of a Submarine Canyon

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 9, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0104536

Keywords

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Funding

  1. HERMIONE project under the European Commission's Seventh Framework Programme [226354]
  2. Spanish national Research Plan [CTM2010-11084-E]
  3. JAEDOC contract within the Program Junta para la Ampliacion de Estudios - Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas
  4. European Social Fund
  5. ICREA Academia award

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The offshore displacement of commercial bottom trawling has raised concerns about the impact of this destructive fishing practice on the deep seafloor, which is in general characterized by lower resilience than shallow water regions. This study focuses on the flanks of La Fonera (or Palamos) submarine canyon in the Northwestern Mediterranean, where an intensive bottom trawl fishery has been active during several decades in the 400-800 m depth range. To explore the degree of alteration of surface sediments (0-50 cm depth) caused by this industrial activity, fishing grounds and control (untrawled) sites were sampled along the canyon flanks with an interface multicorer. Sediment cores were analyzed to obtain vertical profiles of sediment grain-size, dry bulk density, organic carbon content and concentration of the radionuclide Pb-210. At control sites, surface sediments presented sedimentological characteristics typical of slope depositional systems, including a topmost unit of unconsolidated and bioturbated material overlying sediments progressively compacted with depth, with consistently high Pb-210 inventories and exponential decaying profiles of Pb-210 concentrations. Sediment accumulation rates at these untrawled sites ranged from 0.3 to 1.0 cm y(-1). Sediment properties at most trawled sites departed from control sites and the sampled cores were characterized by denser sediments with lower Pb-210 surface concentrations and inventories that indicate widespread erosion of recent sediments caused by trawling gears. Other alterations of the physical sediment properties, including thorough mixing or grain-size sorting, as well as organic carbon impoverishment, were also visible at trawled sites. This work contributes to the growing realization of the capacity of bottom trawling to alter the physical properties of surface sediments and affect the seafloor integrity over large spatial scales of the deep-sea.

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