Epibenthic macrofauna abundance during RSS James Clark Ross cruise JR144, South Sandwich arc

The remote South Sandwich arc is an archipelago of small volcanic islands and seamounts entirely surrounded by deep water and about 600 km away from the closest island, South Georgia. As some of the youngest islands (< 5 m.y.) in the Southern Ocean they are ideal for studying colonization processes of the seabed by benthic fauna, but are rarely investigated because of remoteness and extreme weather. The current study attempted to quantify the richness and abundance of the epibenthic macrofauna around the Southern Thule group by taking five epibenthic sledge samples along a depth transect including three shelf (one at 300 m and two at 500 m) and two slope stations (1000 and 1500 m). Our aim was to investigate higher taxon richness and community composition in an isolated Antarctic locality, since recent volcanic eruptions between 1964 and 1997. We examined patterns across all epibenthic macrofauna at phylum and class levels, and investigated trends in some model groups of crustaceans to order and family level. We found that abundance was highest in the shallowest sample and decreased with depth. Shelf samples (300 and 500 m) were dominated by molluscs and malacostracans while at the deeper stations (1000 and 1500 m) nematodes were the most abundant taxon. Surprisingly, the shallow shelf was dominated by animals with restricted dispersal abilities, such as direct developing brooders (malacostracans) or those with lecithotrophic larvae (bivalves of the genus Yoldiella, most bryozoan species). Despite Southern Thule's geological youth, recent eruptions, and its remoteness the shallow shelf was rich in higher taxa (phyla/classes) as well as orders and families of our model groups. Future work at higher taxonomic resolution (species level) should greatly increase understanding of how life has reached and established on these young and highly disturbed seabeds.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Cite this as

Kaiser, Stefanie, Barnes, David K A, Linse, Katrin, Brandt, Angelika (2008). Dataset: Epibenthic macrofauna abundance during RSS James Clark Ross cruise JR144, South Sandwich arc. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.811814

DOI retrieved: 2008

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.811814
Author Kaiser, Stefanie
Given Name Stefanie
Family Name Kaiser
More Authors
Barnes, David K A
Linse, Katrin
Brandt, Angelika
Source Creation 2008
Publication Year 2008
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Kaiser_2008
Subject Areas
Name: Ecology

Name: LandSurface

Name: Lithosphere

Related Identifiers
Title: Epibenthic macrofauna associated with the shelf and slope of a young and isolated Southern Ocean island
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954102008001107
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2008
Source: Antarctic Science
Authors: Kaiser Stefanie , Barnes David K A , Linse Katrin , Brandt Angelika .