Chemosynthesis influences food web and community structure in high-Arctic benthos

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Abstract

Cold seeps are locations where seafloor communities are influenced by the seepage of methane and other reduced compounds from the seabed. We examined macro-infaunal benthos through community analysis and trophic structure using stable isotope analysis at 3 seep locations in the Barents Sea. These seeps were characterized by high densities of the chemosymbiotic polychaetes Siboglinidae, clade Frenulata (up to 32 120 ind. m−2), and thyasirid bivalves, Mendicula cf. pygmaea (up to 4770 ind. m−2). We detected low δ13C signatures in chemosymbiotic polychaetes and in 3 species of omnivorous/predatory polychaetes. These δ13C signatures indicate the input of chemosynthesis-based carbon (CBC) into the food web. Applying a 2-source mixing model, we demonstrated that 28−41% of the nutrition of non-chemosymbiotic polychaetes originates from CBC. We also documented large community variations and small-scale variability within and among the investigated seeps, showing that the impact of seepage on faunal community structure transcends geographic boundaries within the Barents Sea. Moreover, aggregations of heterotrophic macro- and megafauna associated with characteristic seep features (microbial mats, carbonate outcrops, and chemosymbiotic worm-tufts) add 3-dimensional structure and habitat complexity to the seafloor. Cold seeps contribute to the hydrocarbon-derived chemoautotrophy component of these ecosystems and to habitat complexity. These characteristics make the cold seeps of potential high ecological relevance in the functioning of the larger Arctic−Barents Sea ecosystem.

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Åström, E. K. L., Carroll, M. L., Sen, A., Niemann, H., Ambrose, W. G., Lehmann, M. F., & Carroll, J. L. (2019). Chemosynthesis influences food web and community structure in high-Arctic benthos. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 629, 19–42. https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13101

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