C. Fontanier, Pauline Duros, T. Toyofuku, K. Oguri, K. Koho, R. Buscail, A. Grémare, O. Radakovitch, B. Deflandre, L. Nooijer, Sabrina Bichon, S. Goubet, A. Ivanovsky, Gérard Chabaud, C. Menniti, Gert, Jan Reichart, H. Kitazato
{"title":"活的(染色的)深海有孔虫在hachinohe(日本东北部,西太平洋):缺氧生态系统中的环境相互作用","authors":"C. Fontanier, Pauline Duros, T. Toyofuku, K. Oguri, K. Koho, R. Buscail, A. Grémare, O. Radakovitch, B. Deflandre, L. Nooijer, Sabrina Bichon, S. Goubet, A. Ivanovsky, Gérard Chabaud, C. Menniti, Gert, Jan Reichart, H. Kitazato","doi":"10.2113/GSJFR.44.3.281","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Live (Rose-Bengal stained) deep-sea foraminiferal faunas have been studied at five stations between 500–2000-m depth along the NE Japanese margin (western Pacific) to understand how complex environmental conditions (e.g., oxygen depletion, organic matter) control their structure (i.e., diversity, standing stocks, and microhabitats). All stations are characterized by silty sediments with no evidence of recent physical disturbances. The three stations located between 760–1250 m are bathed by dysoxic bottom waters ( 2.2% DW), only the oxygen-depleted sites are characterized by higher concentrations of sugars, lipids, and enzymatically hydrolysable amino acids (EHAA). Sedimentary contents in chlorophyllic pigments decrease with water depth without any major change in their freshness (i.e., [Chl a/(Chl a + Pheo a)] ratios). Both Uvigerina akitaensis and Bolivina spissa are restricted to the stations bathed by dysoxic waters, proving their oxygen-depletion tolerance. In such conditions, both phytophagous taxa are obviously able to take advantage of labile organic compounds (e.g., lipids and EHAA) contained in phytodetritus. Nonionella stella and Rutherfordoides cornuta survive in oxygen-depleted environments probably via alternative metabolic pathways (e.g., denitrification ability) and a large flexibility in trophic requirements. At stations where oxygen availability is higher (i.e., >70 μmol/L in bottom water) and where bioavailable organic compounds are slightly less abundant, diversity indices remain low, and more competitive species (e.g., Uvigerina curticosta, U. cf. U. graciliformis, Nonionella globosa, Nonionellina labradorica, and Elphidium batialis) are dominant.","PeriodicalId":0,"journal":{"name":"","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0,"publicationDate":"2014-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.2113/GSJFR.44.3.281","citationCount":"34","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"LIVING (STAINED) DEEP-SEA FORAMINIFERA OFF HACHINOHE (NE JAPAN, WESTERN PACIFIC): ENVIRONMENTAL INTERPLAY IN OXYGEN-DEPLETED ECOSYSTEMS\",\"authors\":\"C. Fontanier, Pauline Duros, T. Toyofuku, K. Oguri, K. Koho, R. Buscail, A. Grémare, O. Radakovitch, B. Deflandre, L. Nooijer, Sabrina Bichon, S. Goubet, A. Ivanovsky, Gérard Chabaud, C. Menniti, Gert, Jan Reichart, H. Kitazato\",\"doi\":\"10.2113/GSJFR.44.3.281\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Live (Rose-Bengal stained) deep-sea foraminiferal faunas have been studied at five stations between 500–2000-m depth along the NE Japanese margin (western Pacific) to understand how complex environmental conditions (e.g., oxygen depletion, organic matter) control their structure (i.e., diversity, standing stocks, and microhabitats). All stations are characterized by silty sediments with no evidence of recent physical disturbances. The three stations located between 760–1250 m are bathed by dysoxic bottom waters ( 2.2% DW), only the oxygen-depleted sites are characterized by higher concentrations of sugars, lipids, and enzymatically hydrolysable amino acids (EHAA). Sedimentary contents in chlorophyllic pigments decrease with water depth without any major change in their freshness (i.e., [Chl a/(Chl a + Pheo a)] ratios). Both Uvigerina akitaensis and Bolivina spissa are restricted to the stations bathed by dysoxic waters, proving their oxygen-depletion tolerance. In such conditions, both phytophagous taxa are obviously able to take advantage of labile organic compounds (e.g., lipids and EHAA) contained in phytodetritus. Nonionella stella and Rutherfordoides cornuta survive in oxygen-depleted environments probably via alternative metabolic pathways (e.g., denitrification ability) and a large flexibility in trophic requirements. At stations where oxygen availability is higher (i.e., >70 μmol/L in bottom water) and where bioavailable organic compounds are slightly less abundant, diversity indices remain low, and more competitive species (e.g., Uvigerina curticosta, U. cf. U. graciliformis, Nonionella globosa, Nonionellina labradorica, and Elphidium batialis) are dominant.\",\"PeriodicalId\":0,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0,\"publicationDate\":\"2014-07-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.2113/GSJFR.44.3.281\",\"citationCount\":\"34\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"89\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.2113/GSJFR.44.3.281\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"","FirstCategoryId":"89","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2113/GSJFR.44.3.281","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 34
摘要
在日本东北缘(西太平洋)500 - 2000米深度的5个站点对活的深海有孔虫动物群进行了研究,以了解复杂的环境条件(如氧气消耗、有机物)如何控制它们的结构(即多样性、常存种群和微栖息地)。所有台站的特征都是粉质沉积物,没有近期物理扰动的证据。位于760-1250米之间的三个站点被缺氧底水(2.2% DW)所淹没,只有缺氧站点的特征是糖、脂质和酶解氨基酸(EHAA)浓度较高。叶绿素色素的沉积含量随水深的增加而减少,但其新鲜度(即[Chl a/(Chl a + Pheo a)]比值)没有明显变化。秋木绿枝内生菌和绿枝内生菌都局限于缺氧水体的站点,证明了它们的耗氧耐受性。在这种条件下,两种植食分类群显然都能够利用植物碎屑中含有的不稳定有机化合物(例如脂类和EHAA)。Nonionella stella和Rutherfordoides cornuta在缺氧环境中生存可能是通过替代代谢途径(例如反硝化能力)和营养需求的巨大灵活性。在氧可用性较高的站点(即底部水体中0 ~ 70 μmol/L)和生物可利用性有机化合物略少的站点,多样性指数仍然较低,具有较强竞争力的物种(如curticosta Uvigerina, U. cf. U. graciliformis, Nonionella globosa, Nonionellina labradorica和Elphidium batialis)占主导地位。
LIVING (STAINED) DEEP-SEA FORAMINIFERA OFF HACHINOHE (NE JAPAN, WESTERN PACIFIC): ENVIRONMENTAL INTERPLAY IN OXYGEN-DEPLETED ECOSYSTEMS
Live (Rose-Bengal stained) deep-sea foraminiferal faunas have been studied at five stations between 500–2000-m depth along the NE Japanese margin (western Pacific) to understand how complex environmental conditions (e.g., oxygen depletion, organic matter) control their structure (i.e., diversity, standing stocks, and microhabitats). All stations are characterized by silty sediments with no evidence of recent physical disturbances. The three stations located between 760–1250 m are bathed by dysoxic bottom waters ( 2.2% DW), only the oxygen-depleted sites are characterized by higher concentrations of sugars, lipids, and enzymatically hydrolysable amino acids (EHAA). Sedimentary contents in chlorophyllic pigments decrease with water depth without any major change in their freshness (i.e., [Chl a/(Chl a + Pheo a)] ratios). Both Uvigerina akitaensis and Bolivina spissa are restricted to the stations bathed by dysoxic waters, proving their oxygen-depletion tolerance. In such conditions, both phytophagous taxa are obviously able to take advantage of labile organic compounds (e.g., lipids and EHAA) contained in phytodetritus. Nonionella stella and Rutherfordoides cornuta survive in oxygen-depleted environments probably via alternative metabolic pathways (e.g., denitrification ability) and a large flexibility in trophic requirements. At stations where oxygen availability is higher (i.e., >70 μmol/L in bottom water) and where bioavailable organic compounds are slightly less abundant, diversity indices remain low, and more competitive species (e.g., Uvigerina curticosta, U. cf. U. graciliformis, Nonionella globosa, Nonionellina labradorica, and Elphidium batialis) are dominant.