The Discovery of New Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vent Communities in the Southern Ocean and Implications for Biogeography

Alex D. Rogers(University of Oxford), Paul A. Tyler(National Oceanography Centre), Douglas P. Connelly(Natural Environment Research Council), Jon Copley(National Oceanography Centre), Rachael H. James(Natural Environment Research Council), Robert D Larter(British Antarctic Survey), Katrin Linse(British Antarctic Survey), Rachel A. Mills(National Oceanography Centre), Alfredo Naveira Garabato(National Oceanography Centre), Richard D. Pancost(University of Bristol), David A. Pearce(British Antarctic Survey), Nicholas Polunin(Newcastle University), Christopher R. German(Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), Timothy M. Shank(Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), Philipp H. Boersch‐Supan(University of St Andrews), Belinda Alker(Natural Environment Research Council), Alfred Aquilina(National Oceanography Centre), Sarah A. Bennett(Natural Environment Research Council), Andrew Clarke(British Antarctic Survey), Robert J. J. Dinley(National Oceanography Centre), Alastair G C Graham(British Antarctic Survey), Darryl R H Green(Natural Environment Research Council), Jeffrey A. Hawkes(Natural Environment Research Council), Laura Hepburn(National Oceanography Centre), Ana Hilário(University of Aveiro), Veerle A.I. Huvenne(Natural Environment Research Council), Leigh Marsh(National Oceanography Centre), Eva Ramírez-Llodra(Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas), WILLIAM D. REID(Newcastle University), Christopher Nicolai Roterman(National Oceanography Centre), Christopher J. Sweeting(Newcastle University), Sven Thatje(National Oceanography Centre), Katrin Zwirglmaier(British Antarctic Survey)
PLoS Biology
January 3, 2012
Cited by 295Open Access
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Abstract

Since the first discovery of deep-sea hydrothermal vents along the Galápagos Rift in 1977, numerous vent sites and endemic faunal assemblages have been found along mid-ocean ridges and back-arc basins at low to mid latitudes. These discoveries have suggested the existence of separate biogeographic provinces in the Atlantic and the North West Pacific, the existence of a province including the South West Pacific and Indian Ocean, and a separation of the North East Pacific, North East Pacific Rise, and South East Pacific Rise. The Southern Ocean is known to be a region of high deep-sea species diversity and centre of origin for the global deep-sea fauna. It has also been proposed as a gateway connecting hydrothermal vents in different oceans but is little explored because of extreme conditions. Since 2009 we have explored two segments of the East Scotia Ridge (ESR) in the Southern Ocean using a remotely operated vehicle. In each segment we located deep-sea hydrothermal vents hosting high-temperature black smokers up to 382.8°C and diffuse venting. The chemosynthetic ecosystems hosted by these vents are dominated by a new yeti crab (Kiwa n. sp.), stalked barnacles, limpets, peltospiroid gastropods, anemones, and a predatory sea star. Taxa abundant in vent ecosystems in other oceans, including polychaete worms (Siboglinidae), bathymodiolid mussels, and alvinocaridid shrimps, are absent from the ESR vents. These groups, except the Siboglinidae, possess planktotrophic larvae, rare in Antarctic marine invertebrates, suggesting that the environmental conditions of the Southern Ocean may act as a dispersal filter for vent taxa. Evidence from the distinctive fauna, the unique community structure, and multivariate analyses suggest that the Antarctic vent ecosystems represent a new vent biogeographic province. However, multivariate analyses of species present at the ESR and at other deep-sea hydrothermal vents globally indicate that vent biogeography is more complex than previously recognised.


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