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Mercury Stable Isotopes Reveal the Vertical Distribution and Trophic Ecology of Deep-Pelagic Organisms over the North-East Atlantic Ocean Continental Slope. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Deep-pelagic species play a crucial role in marine ecosystems but are threatened by global changes and human activity, making understanding their ecology essential.
  • This study utilized stable isotope analysis of mercury, carbon, and nitrogen to classify deep-pelagic species caught in the Bay of Biscay based on their foraging depth and feeding habits.
  • Findings showed that different mercury isotopes could effectively distinguish species across various depths, revealing diverse mercury sources linked to different trophic groups in the area.

Article Abstract

Deep-pelagic species are central to marine ecosystems and increasingly vulnerable to global change and human exploitation. To date, our understanding of these communities remains limited mainly due to the difficulty of observations, calling for complementary innovative tools to better characterize their ecology. We used mercury (ΔHg, δHg, ΔHg, and ΔHg), carbon (δC), and nitrogen (δN) stable isotope compositions to segregate deep-pelagic species caught on the continental slope of the Bay of Biscay (NE Atlantic) according to their foraging depth and trophic ecology. Decreasing fish ΔHg values with corresponding depth estimates from the surface to down to 1,800 m confirmed that mercury isotopes are able to segregate deep species over a large vertical gradient according to their foraging depth. Results from isotopic compositions also identified different mercury sources, likely reflecting different trophic assemblages over the continental slope, in particular, the demersal influence for some species, compared to purely oceanic species. Overall, our results demonstrate how mercury stable isotopes can inform the vertical foraging habitat of little-known species and communities feeding in the deep.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.4c05201DOI Listing

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