| Literature DB >> 26907101 |
Paulo Y G Sumida1, Joan M Alfaro-Lucas1, Mauricio Shimabukuro1, Hiroshi Kitazato2, Jose A A Perez3, Abilio Soares-Gomes4, Takashi Toyofuku2, Andre O S Lima3, Koichi Ara5, Yoshihiro Fujiwara2.
Abstract
Whale carcasses create remarkable habitats in the deep-sea by producing concentrated sources of organic matter for a food-deprived biota as well as places of evolutionary novelty and biodiversity. Although many of the faunal patterns on whale falls have already been described, the biogeography of these communities is still poorly known especially from basins other than the NE Pacific Ocean. The present work describes the community composition of the deepest natural whale carcass described to date found at 4204 m depth on Southwest Atlantic Ocean with manned submersible Shinkai 6500. This is the first record of a natural whale fall in the deep Atlantic Ocean. The skeleton belonged to an Antarctic Minke whale composed of only nine caudal vertebrae, whose degradation state suggests it was on the bottom for 5-10 years. The fauna consisted mainly of galatheid crabs, a new species of the snail Rubyspira and polychaete worms, including a new Osedax species. Most of the 41 species found in the carcass are new to science, with several genera shared with NE Pacific whale falls and vent and seep ecosystems. This similarity suggests the whale-fall fauna is widespread and has dispersed in a stepping stone fashion, deeply influencing its evolutionary history.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26907101 PMCID: PMC4764926 DOI: 10.1038/srep22139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Location of the whale carcass found at the base of São Paulo Ridge at 4204 m depth.
The map was created using the QGIS software, bathymetric data from CleanTOPO2 (http://www.shadedrelief.com/cleantopo2/index.html) and Word borders from Thematic Mapping (http://thematicmapping.org/downloads/world_borders.php). QGIS Development Team, 2015. QGIS Geographic Information System. Open Source Geospatial Foundation Project. http://qgis.osgeo.org. The World Borders Dataset and the data obtained from the QGIS Open Source Geospatial Foundation Project is licensed under the Attribution-Share-Alike 3.0 Unported license. The license terms can be found on the following link: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/.
Figure 2Partial Antarctic Minke whale skeleton (Balaenoptera bonaerensis) found at 4204 m in the Southwest Atlantic Ocean using the manned submersible Shinkai 6500.
(A) Caudal vertebrae lying on a thin layer of fine sediment over basaltic rocks; (B) Schematic view of the whale skeleton reconstructed from Shinkai 6500 videos. The nine vertebrae are numbered and shown in pale yellow color, while the round intervertebral discs are darker. Vertebrae were numbered from the posterior end of the animal towards the head.
Species collected at the SW Atlantic whale fall site at 4204 m depth.
| Phylum | Class | Order | Family | Species or tag name | Number of Individuals* | Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cnidaria | Anthozoa | Actiniaria | n.d. | Cnidaria sp. | n.d. | Rocks |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Aciculata | Dorvilleidae | n.d. | Bone/Sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Aciculata | Nereididae | n.d. | Sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Canalipalpata | Ampharetidae | cf. | 40 | Sediment |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Canalipalpata | Chaetopteridae | n.d. | Sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Canalipalpata | Cirratulidae | n.d. | Bone | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Canalipalpata | Cirratulidae | n.d. | Sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Canalipalpata | Spionidae | n.d. | Bone | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Canalipalpata | Spionidae | n.d. | Sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Capitellida | Capitellidae | n.d. | Bone/Sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Hesionidae | Hesiocaeca sp. nov. | n.d. | Bone/Sediment |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Hesionidae | n.d. | Bone/Sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Hesionidae | n.d. | Bone | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Hesionidae | n.d. | Bone | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Hesionidae | n.d. | Bone/Sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Polynoidae | Polynoidae | 18*** | Bone/sediment |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Polynoidae | Polynoidae sp. | n.d. | Bone/sediment |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Polynoidae | n.d. | Bone/sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Polynoidae | n.d. | Bone/sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Sigalionidae | Sigalionidae | n.d. | Sediment |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Sphaerodoridae | n.d. | Sediment | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Phyllodocida | Chrysopetalidae | n.d. | Bone | |
| Annelida | Polychaeta | Sabellida | Siboglinidae | 98 | Bone | |
| Arthropoda | Malacostraca | Amphipoda | Uristidae | 17 | Bone/sediment | |
| Arthropoda | Malacostraca | Isopoda | n.d. | Epicaridea sp. | n.d. | Sediment |
| Arthropoda | Malacostraca | Decapoda | Munidopsidae | 295 | Bone/sediment | |
| Arthropoda | Maxillopoda | n.d. | n.d. | Copepoda sp.1 | n.d. | Parasitic on |
| Arthropoda | Maxillopoda | Harpacticoida | n.d. | Copepoda sp.2 | n.d. | Bone |
| Arthropoda | Maxillopoda | Cyclopoida | n.d. | Copepoda sp.3 | n.d. | Bone |
| Nematoda | Chromadorea | Monhysterida | Xyalidae | n.d. | Bone | |
| Mollusca | Bivalvia | Nuculanoida | Malletiidae | n.d. | Sediment | |
| Mollusca | Gastropoda | unassigned | unassigned | 52 | Sediment | |
| Mollusca | Gastropoda | Neogastropoda | Raphitomidae | Gastropoda sp. | 20 | Bone epifaunal |
| Echinodermata | Echinoidea | indet. | indet. | Echinoidea sp. | 2 | Bone epifaunal |
| Echinodermata | Ophiuroidea | indet. | indet. | Ophiuroidea sp. | n.d. | Sediment |
Each species is assigned to a location within the habitat. *Only for organisms that could be counted in videos. **Includes eight different species. ***Includes all three polynoid species collected. n.d. = not determined.
†Shimabukuro et al., in prep.;
‡Silva et al.38.
∆Shimabukuro et al., in prep.;
☆Shimabukuro et al., in prep.;
⨂Fujiwara et al., in prep.;
▾Fujiwara et al., in prep.
Figure 3Distribution of epifauna on the whale fall and surrounding sediments and rocks.
A) General view of the SW Atlantic whale carcass vertebrae 1–7. Note the abundant fauna and the bacterial mats on vertebrae 1–5. A dark echinoid (Echinoidea sp. 1) can be seen on top of vertebra 2; (B) Black basaltic rocks around the whale fall were heavily colonized by dense carpets of anemones (arrow) (up to 10 ind. cm−2). The large gastropod Rubyspira sp. nov. lies behind the red palps of Osedax sp. nov. Note also the small unidentified gastropods attached to the bone; (C) Red palps and gelatinous tubes of several Osedax sp. nov. in vertebra 8. Note the ampharetid polychaete tubes (arrow) and the bone degraded area (arrowhead); (D) Clusters of Osedax sp. nov. in vertebrae 6 and 7. On the surrounding sediment, Rubyspira sp. nov. and a tube of an ampharetid polychaete (arrow). The small lysianassoid amphipod Stephonix sp. lies on the top of the bone (arrowhead); (E) Dense bacterial mats covering vertebrae 2 and 3. Here we can see the small and the large Munidopsis and a polynoid polychaete (arrow); (F) The eyeless nereid polychaete Neanthes sp. nov. climbing the surface of vertebra 6 (arrow).
Figure 4Some of the most abundant organisms collected at the 4204 m depth whale fall in the São Paulo Ridge, Southwest Atlantic Ocean.
(A) Unidentified sea anemone inhabiting the rocks surrounding the whale skeleton; (B) Large Munidopsis sp.; (C) The amphipod Stephonix sp.; (D) Rubyspira sp. nov.; (E) Osedax sp. nov.; (F) Neanthes sp. nov.; (G) cf. Grassleia sp.; (H) Bathykurila cf. guaymasensis; (I) Vrijenhoekia sp. nov.
Genera reported in the present study and their previous geographic records.
| Genus | Previously known from | Habitat | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| cf. | NE Pacific | Hydrothermal vents and cold seeps | |
| NE Pacific | Whale falls | ||
| NE Pacific | Hydrothermal vents and whale falls | ||
| NE Pacific | Abyssal plain | ||
| NE Pacific | Whale falls | ||
| NE Pacific/NE Atlantic | Cold seeps (NE Atlantic) and whale falls (NE Pacific) | ||
| NE Atlantic | Wood falls | ||
| N Pacific/NE Atlantic | Whale falls | ||
| NE Pacific/SW Atlantic | Hydrothermal vents (NE Pacific) and oil seeps (SW Atlantic) | ||
| All Pacific/NE Atlantic/Southern Ocean | Whale falls |
Most genera are shared between the NE Pacific Ocean whale falls and hydrothermal vents and cold seeps.