Title of article :
Phytodetritus at the abyssal seafloor across 10° of latitude in the central equatorial Pacific
Author/Authors :
Smith، نويسنده , , Craig R. and Hoover، نويسنده , , Daniel J. and Doan، نويسنده , , Shawn E. and Pope، نويسنده , , Robin H. and Demaster، نويسنده , , David J. and Dobbs، نويسنده , , Fred C. and Altabet، نويسنده , , Mark A.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1996
Abstract :
Fresh phytoplankton detritus (or phytodetritus) has been reported from numerous deep seafloor sites in the temperate North Atlantic and Pacific Oceans following seasonal phytoplankton blooms. Here we report the first strong evidence for abyssal accumulations of phytodetritus in the tropics, in the central equatorial Pacific. In November–December 1992 we obtained photographs and/or sediment-core samples from 61 abyssal stations (water depths of 4280–5012 m) between 12°S and 9°N along ∼ 140°W. Greenish flocculent material was recovered from the top of multiple-core samples from 5°S to 5°N; this material was most abundant from 2°S to 2°N, in some areas forming continuous layers at least 5 mm thick, and individual aggregates > 1 cm in diameter. The greenish material was clearly visible in bottom photographs as a green veneer that covered >95% of the seafloor near the equator, and as individual cm-scale aggregates covering <1% of the seafloor. Occasionally, thick accumulations of cm-scale aggregates occurred in biogenic pits. Cleared trails and feeding traces suggest that surface-deposit-feeding holothurians and echiurans grazed the greenish material. Microscopic examination of greenish material recovered from core tops and a burrow lumen revealed relatively intact diatoms (including Rhizosolenia sp.) and other microalgae with chloroplasts containing chlorophyll. The greenish material was 1–12.5% organic carbon by weight, i.e. 5–39 times richer than associated seafloor sediments. It also contained high excess activities of 234Th, suggesting arrival from the water column in the previous 100 days. Samples of the greenish flocculent material from 0° and 5°N incubated at simulated environmental pressure and temperature with 14C-labeled glutamate exhibited ⩾ 5-fold higher rates of microbial activity than underlying sediments or brown floc from 9°N. Surface-sediment samples (which included the greenish flocculent material) from 5°S to 5°N also contained significant concentrations of chlorophyll a and other chloropigments; the chloropigment concentrations were roughly comparable to deep-sea phytodetritus collected in the North Atlantic.
clude that fresh, organic-rich phytodetritus was present on the seafloor from 5°S to 5°N along 140°W in November–December 1992, with highest concentrations within 2–3° of the equator. This material is likely to be a concentrated, high-quality food resource for deep-sea microbes and metazoans. We estimate an upper limit for the standing stock of this phytodetritus to be ∼2.6 mmol Corg/m2; this corresponds to ∼3% of the annual flux of organic carbon to the seafloor at these latitudes in 1992. Because the degradation rate of this material appears to be very high, its presence at the seafloor for several months per year could yield significant phytodetrital contributions to the annual seafloor organic-carbon budget. We also suggest that the phytodetrital aggregates are formed at intense convergence zones resulting from seasonal passage of tropical instability waves within 5° of the equator; if so, phytodetrital accumulations are likely to recur seasonally over broad areas of the abyssal equatorial Pacific.
Journal title :
Deep-sea research part II: Topical Studies in oceanography
Journal title :
Deep-sea research part II: Topical Studies in oceanography