Publication | Open Access
Biological and environmental rhythms in (dark) deep-sea hydrothermal ecosystems
37
Citations
50
References
2017
Year
Environmental RhythmsAtlantic Hydrothermal VentsEngineeringMarine SystemsOceanographyEarth ScienceSocial SciencesOcean MonitoringBiogeographyNortheast Pacific OceanTemporal EcologyHydrothermal FluidOceanic SystemsSeafloor Hydrothermal SystemHydrothermal VentClimate DynamicsHydrothermal Vent EcologyMarine EcologyMarine Biology
Abstract. During 2011, two deep-sea observatories focusing on hydrothermal vent ecology were up and running in the Atlantic (Eiffel Tower, Lucky Strike vent field) and the Northeast Pacific Ocean (NEP) (Grotto, Main Endeavour Field). Both ecological modules recorded imagery and environmental variables jointly for a time span of 23 days (7–30 October 2011) and environmental variables for up to 9 months (October 2011–June 2012). Community dynamics were assessed based on imagery analysis and rhythms in temporal variation for both fauna and environment were revealed. Tidal rhythms were found to be at play in the two settings and were most visible in temperature and tubeworm appearances (at NEP). A ∼ 6 h lag in tidal rhythm occurrence was observed between Pacific and Atlantic hydrothermal vents, which corresponds to the geographical distance and time delay between the two sites.
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