Enhanced benthic activity in sandy sublittoral sediments: Evidence from 13C tracer experiments

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Abstract

In situ and on-board pulse-chase experiments were carried out on a sublittoral fine sand in the German Bight (southern North Sea) to investigate the hypothesis that sandy sediments are highly active and have fast turnover rates. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a series of experiments where we investigated the pathway of settling particulate organic carbon through the benthic food web. The diatom Ditylum brightwellii was labelled with the stable carbon isotope 13 C and injected into incubation chambers. On-board incubations lasted 12, 30 and 132 h, while the in situ experiment was incubated for 32 h. The study revealed a stepwise short-term processing of a phytoplankton bloom settling on a sandy sediment. After the 12 h incubation, the largest fraction of recovered carbon was in the bacteria (62%), but after longer incubation times (30 and 32 h in situ) the macrofauna gained more importance (15 and 48%, respectively), until after 132 h the greatest fraction was mineralized to CO 2 (44%). Our findings show the rapid impact of the benthic sand community on a settling phytoplankton bloom and the great importance of bacteria in the first steps of algal carbon processing. © 2006 Taylor & Francis.

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Bühring, S. I., Ehrenhauss, S., Kamp, A., Moodley, L., & Witte, U. (2006). Enhanced benthic activity in sandy sublittoral sediments: Evidence from 13C tracer experiments. Marine Biology Research, 2(2), 120–129. https://doi.org/10.1080/17451000600678773

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