Abyssal plain faunal carbon flows remain depressed 26 years after a simulated deep-sea mining disturbance.

Stratmann, Tanja, Lins, Lidia, Purser, Autun, Marcon, Yann, Rodrigues, Clara F., Ravara, Ascensão, Cunha, Marina R., Simon-Lledó, Erik, Jones, Daniel O. B., Sweetman, Andrew K., Köser, Kevin and van Oevelen, Dick (2018) Abyssal plain faunal carbon flows remain depressed 26 years after a simulated deep-sea mining disturbance. Open Access Biogeosciences (BG), 15 (13). pp. 4131-4145. DOI 10.5194/bg-15-4131-2018.

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Abstract

Future deep-sea mining for polymetallic nodules in abyssal plains will negatively impact the benthic ecosystem, but it is largely unclear whether this ecosystem will be able to recover from mining disturbance and if so, to what extent and at what timescale. During the "DISturbance and reCOLonization" (DISCOL) experiment, a total of 22% of the seafloor within a 10.8km2 circular area of the nodule-rich seafloor in the Peru Basin (SE Pacific) was ploughed in 1989 to bury nodules and mix the surface sediment. This area was revisited 0.1, 0.5, 3, 7, and 26 years after the disturbance to assess macrofauna, invertebrate megafauna and fish density and diversity. We used this unique abyssal faunal time series to develop carbon-based food web models for each point in the time series using the linear inverse modeling approach for sediments subjected to two disturbance levels: (1) outside the plough tracks; not directly disturbed by plough, but probably suffered from additional sedimentation; and (2) inside the plough tracks. Total faunal carbon stock was always higher outside plough tracks compared with inside plough tracks. After 26 years, the carbon stock inside the plough tracks was 54% of the carbon stock outside plough tracks. Deposit feeders were least affected by the disturbance, with modeled respiration, external predation, and excretion rates being reduced by only 2.6% inside plough tracks compared with outside plough tracks after 26 years. In contrast, the respiration rate of filter and suspension feeders was 79.5% lower in the plough tracks after 26 years. The "total system throughput" (T..), i.e., the total sum of modeled carbon flows in the food web, was higher throughout the time series outside plough tracks compared with the corresponding inside plough tracks area and was lowest inside plough tracks directly after the disturbance (8.63 × 10−3±1.58 × 10−5mmolCm−2d−1). Even 26 years after the DISCOL disturbance, the discrepancy of T.. between outside and inside plough tracks was still 56%. Hence, C cycling within the faunal compartments of an abyssal plain ecosystem remains reduced 26 years after physical disturbance, and a longer period is required for the system to recover from such a small-scale sediment disturbance experiment.

Document Type: Article
Funder compliance: info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/FP7/603418
Research affiliation: OceanRep > GEOMAR > FB2 Marine Biogeochemistry > FB2-MG Marine Geosystems
OceanRep > GEOMAR > FB2 Marine Biogeochemistry > FB2-MG Marine Geosystems > DeepSea Monitoring
NIOZ
NOC
HGF-AWI
Refereed: Yes
Open Access Journal?: Yes
Publisher: Copernicus Publications (EGU)
Projects: MIDAS, JPIO-MiningImpact
Expeditions/Models/Experiments:
Date Deposited: 09 Jul 2018 12:08
Last Modified: 08 Feb 2021 07:37
URI: https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/43634

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