4.6 Review

Uniform bathymetric zonation of marine benthos on a Pan-Arctic scale

Journal

PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 202, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.pocean.2022.102764

Keywords

Central Arctic; Bathymetric zonation; Benthic assemblages; Biogeography

Categories

Funding

  1. NOAA's office of Ocean Exploration and Research
  2. Arctic SIZE project - UiT The Arctic University of Norway
  3. Tromso Research Foundation
  4. Russian Foundation for Basic Research (RFBR) [18-0560228]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study conducted a large-scale analysis of bathymetric zonation of benthic fauna in the Arctic Ocean, which had not been previously studied on an ocean-scale. The findings showed a decrease in abundance, biomass, and diversity with increasing depth, and identified two major bathymetric boundaries. The distribution patterns and species turnover of benthos were relatively consistent throughout the Central Arctic continental slope and abyssal plain.
While numerous regional studies of bathymetric zonation of benthic fauna globally have been done, few large-scale analyses exist, and no ocean-scale studies have focused on the Arctic Ocean to date. In the present work we, hence, examined bathymetric zonation of macro-and megabenthos over a depth range spanning from the shelf to the abyssal plain (14 - 5416 m) and regionally extending from the Fram Strait to the Beaufort Sea (as a whole hereafter called the Central Arctic). Based on 104 quantitative (box-corers and grabs) and 37 semi-quantitative (trawls) samples compiled from different studies we evaluated bathymetric zonation patterns in abundance, biomass and diversity, and also compared species composition among samples. Abundance and biomass decreased with depth from > 3000 ind. m(-2) and > 40 g ww m(-2) to similar to 130 ind. m(-2) and < 1 g ww m(-2) corroborating previous studies. Diversity showed a parabolic pattern, peaking at similar to 100-600 m. Cluster analysis revealed four (macrofauna) and five (megafauna) groups of benthic assemblages, including three that covered the upper and lower continental slope and the abyssal plains with relatively little overlap (named the Lower Shelf - Upper Slope 1, the Lower Slope and the Abyss). Substantial changes in benthic community composition were observed at depths 650-950 m (between the Lower Shelf - Upper Slope 1 and the Lower Slope) and 2600-3000 m (between the Lower Slope and the Abyss), so we interpreted these two depth horizons as major bathymetric boundaries. The first boundary (650-950 m) corresponds to the transition from sublittoral to bathyal fauna consistent with previous studies. The second boundary (2600-3000 m) reflects a decrease in benthic abundance, biomass and diversity within the Central Arctic abyssal plain. Bathymetric patterns and species overturn of benthos were relatively uniform throughout the entire Central Arctic continental slope and abyssal plain. For some regions of the Arctic Ocean, foremost for the area north from Greenland and Canadian Archipelago, benthic data are still unavailable and further research is needed.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available