Higgs Nicholas D, Gates Andrew R, Jones Daniel O B
Marine Institute, Plymouth University, Drake Circus, Plymouth, United Kingdom.
SERPENT Project, National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2014 May 7;9(5):e96016. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0096016. eCollection 2014.
The carcasses of large pelagic vertebrates that sink to the seafloor represent a bounty of food to the deep-sea benthos, but natural food-falls have been rarely observed. Here were report on the first observations of three large 'fish-falls' on the deep-sea floor: a whale shark (Rhincodon typus) and three mobulid rays (genus Mobula). These observations come from industrial remotely operated vehicle video surveys of the seafloor on the Angola continental margin. The carcasses supported moderate communities of scavenging fish (up to 50 individuals per carcass), mostly from the family Zoarcidae, which appeared to be resident on or around the remains. Based on a global dataset of scavenging rates, we estimate that the elasmobranch carcasses provided food for mobile scavengers over extended time periods from weeks to months. No evidence of whale-fall type communities was observed on or around the carcasses, with the exception of putative sulphide-oxidising bacterial mats that outlined one of the mobulid carcasses. Using best estimates of carcass mass, we calculate that the carcasses reported here represent an average supply of carbon to the local seafloor of 0.4 mg m(-2)d(-1), equivalent to ∼ 4% of the normal particulate organic carbon flux. Rapid flux of high-quality labile organic carbon in fish carcasses increases the transfer efficiency of the biological pump of carbon from the surface oceans to the deep sea. We postulate that these food-falls are the result of a local concentration of large marine vertebrates, linked to the high surface primary productivity in the study area.
沉入海底的大型远洋脊椎动物尸体为深海底栖生物提供了丰富的食物,但自然发生的食物沉降却很少被观测到。在此,我们报告在深海海底首次观测到的三次大型“鱼落”事件:一具鲸鲨(鲸鲨属)尸体和三具蝠鲼科鲼属鱼类尸体。这些观测结果来自对安哥拉大陆边缘海底进行的工业遥控潜水器视频调查。这些尸体支撑起了适度规模的食腐鱼类群落(每具尸体周围最多有50只),主要来自绵鳚科,它们似乎栖息在残骸之上或周围。基于全球食腐率数据集,我们估计这些软骨鱼类尸体在长达数周乃至数月的时间里为游动食腐动物提供了食物。在这些尸体之上或周围,未观察到鲸落型群落的迹象,不过有疑似硫化物氧化细菌垫勾勒出了其中一具蝠鲼尸体的轮廓。利用对尸体质量的最佳估计,我们计算出本文所报告的这些尸体向当地海底平均供应的碳量为0.4毫克/平方米·天,约相当于正常颗粒有机碳通量的4%。鱼尸体中高质量不稳定有机碳的快速通量提高了碳从表层海洋向深海的生物泵输送效率。我们推测,这些食物沉降是大型海洋脊椎动物在当地集中的结果,这与研究区域高的表层初级生产力有关。