多么幸运的一枪!照片证据显示在深海中有中等大小的天然食物掉落

Thomas Soltwedel, Karen von Juterzenka, Katrin Premke, Michael Klages
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引用次数: 33

摘要

虽然在过去几十年中,深海图像的使用大大增加,但关于深海海底浮游生物的报告却很少。虽然有一些报道描述了在太平洋东北部和东南部深处发现的鲸鱼尸体,但对厘米到米尺度的无脊椎动物或脊椎动物食物的描述却极为罕见。在北极地区的一个深海长期站(AWI-“Hausgarten”)进行了4年的广泛工作,包括在水深1250至5600米之间覆盖约10,000平方米海底的各种相机系统的大规模视觉观测,本文描述了在斯瓦拉巴德以西约1280米水深处首次观察到鱼尸体。鱼骨架全长36 cm,湿重约0.5 kg。根据现场实验,我们估计这具尸体在海底停留的时间很短,大约7小时。深海清道夫群落对此类事件的快速反应,以及对这种有机碳供应的快速利用,可能在一定程度上解释了这种观测的极端罕见。
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What a lucky shot! Photographic evidence for a medium-sized natural food-fall at the deep seafloor

Although the use of deep-sea imagery considerably increased during the last decades, reports on nekton falls to the deep seafloor are very scarce. Whereas there are a few reports describing the finding of whale carcasses in the deep north-eastern and south-eastern Pacific, descriptions of invertebrate or vertebrate food-falls at centimetre to metre scale are extremely rare. After 4 years of extensive work at a deep-sea long-term station in northern polar regions (AWI-“Hausgarten”), including large-scale visual observations with various camera systems covering some 10 000 m2 of seafloor at water depths between 1250 and 5600 m, this paper describes the first observation of a fish carcass at about 1280 m water depth, west off Svålbard. The fish skeleton had a total length of 36 cm and an approximated biomass of 0.5 kg wet weight. On the basis of in situ experiments, we estimated a very short residence time of this particular carcass of about 7 h at the bottom. The fast response of the motile deep-sea scavenger community to such events and the rapid utilisation of this kind of organic carbon supply might partly explain the extreme rarity of such an observation.

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