Biogeography, biodiversity and fluid dependence of deep-sea cold-seep communities at active and passive margins

被引:0
|
作者
机构
来源
Deep Sea Res Pt 2 | / 1-3卷 / 517-567期
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
To date, several cold-seep areas which fuel chemosynthesis-based benthic communities have been explored, mainly by deployment of manned submersibles. They are located in the Atlantic and in the Eastern and Western Pacific oceans and in the Mediterranean Sea, in depths ranging between 400 and 6000 m in different geological contexts in passive and active margins. Our study is based on a review of the existent literature on 24 deep cold seeps. The geographic distribution of seeps, the variations of origin and composition of fluids, and rates of fluid flow are presented as they are important factors which explain the spatial heterogeneity and the biomass of biological communities. Methane-rich fluid of thermogenic and/or biogenic origin is the principal source of energy for high-productive communities; however, production of sulphide by sulphate reduction in the sediment also has a major role. The dominant seep species are large bivalves belonging to the families Vesicomyidae or Mytilidae. Other symbiont-containing species occur belonging to Solemyidae, Thyasiridae, Lucinidae bivalves, Pogonophora worms, Cladorhizidae and Hymedesmiidae sponges. Most of the symbiont-containing cold-seep species are new to science. Different symbiont-containing species rely on sulphide or methane oxidation, or both, via chemoautotrophic endosymbiotic bacteria. A total of 211 species, from which 64 are symbiont-containing species, have been inventoried. Patterns in biodiversity and biogeography are proposed. A large majority of the species are endemic to a seep area and the symbiont-containing species are mainly endemic to the cold-seep ecosystem. A comparison of species found in other deep chemosynthesis-based ecosystems, hydrothermal vents, whale carcass and shipwreck reduced habitats, reveals from the existing data, that only 13 species, of which five are symbiont-containing species occur, at both seeps and hydrothermal vents. The species richness of cold-seep communities decreases with depth. High diversity compared to that on hydrothermal vent sites is found at several seeps. This may be explained by the duration of fluid flow, the sediment substrate which may favour long-term conditions with accumulation of sulphide and the evolution of cold seeps.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Classification of deep-sea cold seep bacteria by transformer combined with Raman spectroscopy
    Liu, Bo
    Liu, Kunxiang
    Qi, Xiaoqing
    Zhang, Weijia
    Li, Bei
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2023, 13 (01)
  • [32] Classification of deep-sea cold seep bacteria by transformer combined with Raman spectroscopy
    Bo Liu
    Kunxiang Liu
    Xiaoqing Qi
    Weijia Zhang
    Bei Li
    Scientific Reports, 13
  • [33] Biogeography and Biodiversity in Sulfide Structures of Active and Inactive Vents at Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Fields of the Southern Mariana Trough
    Kato, Shingo
    Takano, Yoshinori
    Kakegawa, Takeshi
    Oba, Hironori
    Inoue, Kazuhiko
    Kobayashi, Chiyori
    Utsumi, Motoo
    Marumo, Katsumi
    Kobayashi, Kensei
    Ito, Yuki
    Ishibashi, Jun-ichiro
    Yamagishi, Akihiko
    APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2010, 76 (09) : 2968 - 2979
  • [34] Depth-related structure and ecological significance of cold-seep communities - a case study from the Sea of Okhotsk
    Sahling, H
    Galkin, SV
    Salyuk, A
    Greinert, J
    Foerstel, H
    Piepenburg, D
    Suess, E
    DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART I-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS, 2003, 50 (12) : 1391 - 1409
  • [35] What inhabits the South Sandwich Islands deep-sea? Biodiversity and biogeography of bathyal communities using predators as biological samplers
    Queiros, Jose P.
    Xavier, Jose C.
    Abreu, Jose
    Collins, Martin A.
    Belchier, Mark
    Hollyman, Philip R.
    DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART I-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS, 2024, 205
  • [36] Host-specific bacterial communities associated with six cold-seep sponge species in the South China Sea
    Wang, Yan
    Gong, Lin
    Gao, Zhaoming
    Wang, Yong
    Zhao, Feng
    Fu, Lulu
    Li, Xinzheng
    FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2023, 10
  • [37] DEEP-SEA HYDROCARBON SEEP COMMUNITIES - EVIDENCE FOR ENERGY AND NUTRITIONAL CARBON-SOURCES
    BROOKS, JM
    KENNICUTT, MC
    FISHER, CR
    MACKO, SA
    COLE, K
    CHILDRESS, JJ
    BIDIGARE, RR
    VETTER, RD
    SCIENCE, 1987, 238 (4830) : 1138 - 1142
  • [38] Methane Hydrate Formation Kinetics in Varied Sediment of Deep-Sea Cold Seep Environment
    Chen, Xingyu
    Feng, Jingchun
    Xie, Yan
    Xu, Longhang
    Wang, Yi
    Wang, Bin
    Zhang, Si
    Yang, Zhifeng
    ENERGY & FUELS, 2025, 39 (08) : 3954 - 3965
  • [39] The applications of the in situ laser spectroscopy to the deep-sea cold seep and hydrothermal vent system
    Du, Zengfeng
    Zhang, Xin
    Xue, Boyang
    Luan, Zhendong
    Yan, Jun
    SOLID EARTH SCIENCES, 2020, 5 (03) : 153 - 168
  • [40] Cold-seep-like macrofaunal communities in organic- and sulfide-rich sediments of the Congo deep-sea fan
    Olu, K.
    Decker, C.
    Pastor, L.
    Caprais, J. -C.
    Khripounoff, A.
    Morineaux, M.
    Baziz, M. Ain
    Menot, L.
    Rabouille, C.
    DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART II-TOPICAL STUDIES IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 2017, 142 : 180 - 196