Authors / CoAuthors
Przeslawski, R. | Dundas, K. | Radke, L. | Anderson, T.
Abstract
Much of the deep sea comprises soft-sediment habitats dominated by low abundances of small infauna, and traditional methods of biological sampling may therefore fail to sufficiently quantify biodiversity. During feeding and burrowing, many deep sea animals bioturbate the sediment, leaving signs of their activities called lebensspuren ('life traces'). In this study, we use three criteria to assess whether the quantification of lebensspuren from high resolution still images is an appropriate technique to broadly quantify biological activity in the deep sea: 1) The ability to differentiate biological assemblages between geographic regions; 2) the ability to reveal known biological patterns across environmental gradients; and 3) correlation with other methods of biological characterisation often used in the deep sea (e.g. video). Lebensspuren were quantified using a univariate measure of track richness and a multivariate measure of lebensspuren assemblages from the eastern (1712 images, 13 stations) and western (949 images, 11 stations) Australian margins. A total of 46 lebensspuren types were identified, including those matching named trace fossils. Assemblages were significantly different between the two regions, with five lebensspuren types accounting for over 95% of the differentiation (ovoid pinnate trace, crater row, spider feature, matchstick feature, mesh feature). Track richness in the combined margins dataset was correlated to depth, chlorin index (i.e. organic freshness), and possibly mud, although the strength of the relationships varied according to the dataset used. There was no relationship to total organic carbon. Lebensspuren richness from still images was significantly related to lebensspuren from video but not to occurrence of epifauna. Based on these results, the quantification of lebensspuren from still images seems an appropriate measure to broadly characterise biological activity in deep sea soft sediment ecosystems.
Product Type
nonGeographicDataset
eCat Id
72716
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Cnr Jerrabomberra Ave and Hindmarsh Dr GPO Box 378
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Keywords
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- External Publication
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- fossil
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- geochemistry
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- marine biodiversity
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- sedimentology
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- marine
- Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC)
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- Earth Sciences
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- Published_Internal
Publication Date
2011-08-04T00:00:00
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