| Literature DB >> 28507822 |
Daniel Leduc1, Conrad A Pilditch2.
Abstract
Sediment community oxygen consumption (SCOC) is a proxy for organic matter processing and thus provides a useful proxy of benthic ecosystem function. Oxygen uptake in deep-sea sediments is mainly driven by bacteria, and the direct contribution of benthic macro- and mega-infauna respiration is thought to be relatively modest. However, the main contribution of infaunal organisms to benthic respiration, particularly large burrowing organisms, is likely to be indirect and mainly driven by processes such as feeding and bioturbation that stimulate bacterial metabolism and promote the chemical oxidation of reduced solutes. Here, we estimate the direct and indirect contributions of burrowing shrimp (Eucalastacus cf. torbeni) to sediment community oxygen consumption based on incubations of sediment cores from 490 m depth on the continental slope of New Zealand. Results indicate that the presence of one shrimp in the sediment is responsible for an oxygen uptake rate of about 40 µmol d-1, only 1% of which is estimated to be due to shrimp respiration. We estimate that the presence of ten burrowing shrimp m-2 of seabed would lead to an oxygen uptake comparable to current estimates of macro-infaunal community respiration on Chatham Rise based on allometric equations, and would increase total sediment community oxygen uptake by 14% compared to sediment without shrimp. Our findings suggest that oxygen consumption mediated by burrowing shrimp may be substantial in continental slope ecosystems.Entities:
Keywords: Burrow; Chatham Rise; Eucalastacus cf. torbeni; Metabolism; New Zealand; Sediment community oxygen consumption
Year: 2017 PMID: 28507822 PMCID: PMC5429734 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3309
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Map of study area east of New Zealand’s South Island and the position of sampling site (black filled circle) on Chatham Rise and 250, 500, 1,000 and 2,000 m water depth contours.
Figure 2Mean oxygen consumption in four cores without shrimp and one with a single live Eucalastacus cf. torbeni shrimp specimen.
Error bars represent the 95% confidence interval.
Figure 3Picture of the seabed taken using NIWA’s Deep Towed Imaging System (DTIS) on 13 June 2013 (RV Tangaroa voyage TAN1306, station 69) taken approximately 300 m away from study site.
Small burrows and mounds can be seen to occur at high densities. The surface area of the image is approximately 1.25 m2 and the scale bar = 20 cm.