AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the meiofauna community at hydrothermal vents in the East Pacific Rise, focusing on how varying vent fluid emissions affect species diversity and abundance.
  • A total of 52 meiofauna species were identified, with a distinction made between vent specialists, generalists, and basalt specialists, revealing that diversity was lower in extreme conditions near sulfide chimneys compared to more stable environments.
  • The research indicates that as temperature and hydrogen sulfide toxicity increase, fewer species can thrive, leading to less diverse communities, and showing that many meiofauna species are not exclusive to hydrothermal vent ecosystems.

Article Abstract

Background: We studied the meiofauna community at deep-sea hydrothermal vents along a gradient of vent fluid emissions in the axial summit trought (AST) of the East Pacific Rise 9°50'N region. The gradient ranged from extreme high temperatures, high sulfide concentrations, and low pH at sulfide chimneys to ambient deep-sea water conditions on bare basalt. We explore meiofauna diversity and abundance, and discuss its possible underlying ecological and evolutionary processes.

Methodology/principal Findings: After sampling in five physico-chemically different habitats, the meiofauna was sorted, counted and classified. Abundances were low at all sites. A total of 52 species were identified at vent habitats. The vent community was dominated by hard substrate generalists that also lived on bare basalt at ambient deep-sea temperature in the axial summit trough (AST generalists). Some vent species were restricted to a specific vent habitat (vent specialists), but others occurred over a wide range of physico-chemical conditions (vent generalists). Additionally, 35 species were only found on cold bare basalt (basalt specialists). At vent sites, species richness and diversity clearly increased with decreasing influence of vent fluid emissions from extreme flow sulfide chimney (no fauna), high flow pompei worm (S: 4-7, H'(loge): 0.11-0.45), vigorous flow tubeworm (S: 8-23; H'(loge): 0.44-2.00) to low flow mussel habitats (S: 28-31; H'(loge): 2.34-2.60).

Conclusions/significance: Our data suggest that with increasing temperature and toxic hydrogen sulfide concentrations and increasing amplitude of variation of these factors, fewer species are able to cope with these extreme conditions. This results in less diverse communities in more extreme habitats. The finding of many species being present at sites with and without vent fluid emissions points to a non endemic deep-sea hydrothermal vent meiofaunal community. This is in contrast to a mostly endemic macrofauna but similar to what is known for meiofauna from shallow-water vents.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2938375PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0012321PLOS

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