Pelagic-Benthic Coupling, Food Banks, and Climate Change on the West Antarctic Peninsula Shelf

The West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) shelf is deep and detritus-based (i.e., it is fueled by organic material sinking from intense seasonal cycles of primary production in the water column), leading to pelagic-benthic coupling. The WAP is warming rapidly, yielding increases in seawater temperatures an...

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Published in:Oceanography
Main Authors: Craig R. Smith, David J. DeMaster, Carrie J. Thomas, Pavica Sršen, Laura Grange, Victor Evrard, Fabio DeLeo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Oceanography Society 2012-09-01
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tos.org/oceanography/archive/25-3_smith_c.pdf
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author Craig R. Smith
David J. DeMaster
Carrie J. Thomas
Pavica Sršen
Laura Grange
Victor Evrard
Fabio DeLeo
author_facet Craig R. Smith
David J. DeMaster
Carrie J. Thomas
Pavica Sršen
Laura Grange
Victor Evrard
Fabio DeLeo
author_sort Craig R. Smith
collection DOAJ
container_title Oceanography
description The West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) shelf is deep and detritus-based (i.e., it is fueled by organic material sinking from intense seasonal cycles of primary production in the water column), leading to pelagic-benthic coupling. The WAP is warming rapidly, yielding increases in seawater temperatures and reductions in sea ice that may fundamentally alter pelagic-benthic coupling and shelf benthic ecosystems. RVIB Nathaniel B. Palmer and ARSV Laurence M. Gould have provided year-round access to the WAP sea ice zone, facilitating studies of pelagic-benthic coupling and climate change. In the Food for Benthos along the Antarctic Continental Shelf (FOODBANCS) Project, we conducted a 15-month field program to evaluate benthic ecosystem function across the mid-WAP shelf, testing the hypothesis that "phytodetrital material deposited from the summer bloom provides a sustained source of food for benthic detritivores during winter months, when organic-matter flux from the water column is extremely low." We found that the intense seasonality in primary production and food availability in the WAP water column is heavily dampened at the shelf floor by the presence of a "food bank" that sustains benthic ecosystem functions (including sediment-community respiration, deposit feeding, vitellogenesis, spawning, and recruitment of benthos) over the winter; this food bank also influences community structure and life-history strategies of the WAP benthos. The persistence of the food bank may be mediated by low bottom-water temperatures, with the consequence that climate warming might reduce food availability in shelf communities. During the FOODBANCS2 Project, we studied the benthic ecosystem response to the strong latitudinal sea ice gradient along the WAP to explore the ecosystem consequences of sea ice loss from climate change. We found that some aspects of benthic ecosystem structure (e.g., macrofaunal dominance by the polychaete Aurospio foodbancsia) covaried with sea ice duration and are likely to be sensitive to sea ice loss. Other benthic parameters (e.g., the standing crop of macro- and megabenthos) exhibited nonlinear responses, with evidence of resilience along much of the sea ice gradient and abrupt change near one end. Still other benthic parameters (e.g., sediment community respiration) changed very little with sea ice duration. We also found that climate warming is facilitating invasion of the WAP shelf by predacious king crabs, with dramatic reduction in benthic biodiversity and altered ecosystem function. In summary, some important benthic ecosystem parameters along the WAP may be resilient to climate-induced changes in pelagic-benthic coupling, while many others may be highly sensitive, responding nonlinearly to sea ice loss. Incorporation of climate change effects into WAP benthic ecosystem models, including the effects of invasive species, will be challenging until mechanisms, nonlinearities, synergies, and tipping points of climate change effects are better understood.
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spelling doaj-art-10e6b8ea426148009813d1c322b468ea2025-08-19T20:13:49ZengThe Oceanography SocietyOceanography1042-82752012-09-01253188201Pelagic-Benthic Coupling, Food Banks, and Climate Change on the West Antarctic Peninsula ShelfCraig R. SmithDavid J. DeMasterCarrie J. ThomasPavica SršenLaura GrangeVictor EvrardFabio DeLeoThe West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP) shelf is deep and detritus-based (i.e., it is fueled by organic material sinking from intense seasonal cycles of primary production in the water column), leading to pelagic-benthic coupling. The WAP is warming rapidly, yielding increases in seawater temperatures and reductions in sea ice that may fundamentally alter pelagic-benthic coupling and shelf benthic ecosystems. RVIB Nathaniel B. Palmer and ARSV Laurence M. Gould have provided year-round access to the WAP sea ice zone, facilitating studies of pelagic-benthic coupling and climate change. In the Food for Benthos along the Antarctic Continental Shelf (FOODBANCS) Project, we conducted a 15-month field program to evaluate benthic ecosystem function across the mid-WAP shelf, testing the hypothesis that "phytodetrital material deposited from the summer bloom provides a sustained source of food for benthic detritivores during winter months, when organic-matter flux from the water column is extremely low." We found that the intense seasonality in primary production and food availability in the WAP water column is heavily dampened at the shelf floor by the presence of a "food bank" that sustains benthic ecosystem functions (including sediment-community respiration, deposit feeding, vitellogenesis, spawning, and recruitment of benthos) over the winter; this food bank also influences community structure and life-history strategies of the WAP benthos. The persistence of the food bank may be mediated by low bottom-water temperatures, with the consequence that climate warming might reduce food availability in shelf communities. During the FOODBANCS2 Project, we studied the benthic ecosystem response to the strong latitudinal sea ice gradient along the WAP to explore the ecosystem consequences of sea ice loss from climate change. We found that some aspects of benthic ecosystem structure (e.g., macrofaunal dominance by the polychaete Aurospio foodbancsia) covaried with sea ice duration and are likely to be sensitive to sea ice loss. Other benthic parameters (e.g., the standing crop of macro- and megabenthos) exhibited nonlinear responses, with evidence of resilience along much of the sea ice gradient and abrupt change near one end. Still other benthic parameters (e.g., sediment community respiration) changed very little with sea ice duration. We also found that climate warming is facilitating invasion of the WAP shelf by predacious king crabs, with dramatic reduction in benthic biodiversity and altered ecosystem function. In summary, some important benthic ecosystem parameters along the WAP may be resilient to climate-induced changes in pelagic-benthic coupling, while many others may be highly sensitive, responding nonlinearly to sea ice loss. Incorporation of climate change effects into WAP benthic ecosystem models, including the effects of invasive species, will be challenging until mechanisms, nonlinearities, synergies, and tipping points of climate change effects are better understood.http://tos.org/oceanography/archive/25-3_smith_c.pdfWest Antarctic PeninsulaFOODBANKSfood banksbenthic systemsbenthic-pelagic coupling
spellingShingle Craig R. Smith
David J. DeMaster
Carrie J. Thomas
Pavica Sršen
Laura Grange
Victor Evrard
Fabio DeLeo
Pelagic-Benthic Coupling, Food Banks, and Climate Change on the West Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
West Antarctic Peninsula
FOODBANKS
food banks
benthic systems
benthic-pelagic coupling
title Pelagic-Benthic Coupling, Food Banks, and Climate Change on the West Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
title_full Pelagic-Benthic Coupling, Food Banks, and Climate Change on the West Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
title_fullStr Pelagic-Benthic Coupling, Food Banks, and Climate Change on the West Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
title_full_unstemmed Pelagic-Benthic Coupling, Food Banks, and Climate Change on the West Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
title_short Pelagic-Benthic Coupling, Food Banks, and Climate Change on the West Antarctic Peninsula Shelf
title_sort pelagic benthic coupling food banks and climate change on the west antarctic peninsula shelf
topic West Antarctic Peninsula
FOODBANKS
food banks
benthic systems
benthic-pelagic coupling
url http://tos.org/oceanography/archive/25-3_smith_c.pdf
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