Document of bibliographic reference 337330

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Deep-sea nematodes of the Mozambique Channel: evidence of random community assembly dynamics in seep sediments
Abstract
Cold seeps occur globally in areas where gases escape from the seafloor, occasionally resulting in the formation of topographic depressions (pockmarks), characterised by unique physicochemical conditions such as anoxic and sulphuric sediments. Free-living marine nematodes tend to dominate the meiofaunal component in such environments, often occurring at extremely high densities and low richness; the mechanisms defining community assembly in areas of fluid seepage, however, have received little attention. Here we focus on a low-activity pockmark at 789 m in the Mozambique Channel (MC). We assessed the diversity, co-occurrence patterns and phylogenetic community structure of nematodes at this bathyal site to that of a nearby reference area as well as abyssal sediments using metabarcoding. In addition, we compared our molecularly-derived diversity estimates to replicate samples identified morphologically. Overall, nematode Amplicon Sequence Variants (ASVs) and generic richness were similar between Pockmark and Abyssal sediments, but lower compared to the Reference area. Although more than half the genera were shared, over 80% of ASVs were unique within each area and even within each replicate core. Even though both methodologies differentiated the Pockmark from the Reference and Abyssal sites, there was little overlap between the molecularly and morphologically identified taxa, highlighting the deficit of reference sequences for deep-sea nematodes in public databases. Phylogenetic community structure at higher taxonomic levels was clustered and did not differ between the three areas yet analysis within three shared and dominant genera (Acantholaimus, Desmoscolex, Halalaimus), revealed randomness with respect to phylogeny as well as co-occurrence which was exclusive to the Pockmark area. These patterns point to the influence of neutral dynamics at this locality resulting from the stochastic sampling of early colonizing taxa, the successional stage at sampling and/or the functional redundancy within the investigated genera.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000621794500001
Bibliographic citation
Macheriotou, L.; Rigaux, A.; Olu, K.; Zeppilli, D.; Derycke, S.; Vanreusel, A. (2021). Deep-sea nematodes of the Mozambique Channel: evidence of random community assembly dynamics in seep sediments. Front. Mar. Sci. 8: 549834. https://hdl.handle.net/10.3389/fmars.2021.549834
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Lara Macheriotou
Identifier
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5662-5689
Affiliation
Universiteit Gent; Faculteit Wetenschappen; Vakgroep Biologie; Onderzoeksgroep Mariene Biologie
author
Name
Annelien Rigaux
Affiliation
Universiteit Gent; Faculteit Wetenschappen; Vakgroep Biologie; Onderzoeksgroep Mariene Biologie
author
Name
Karine Olu
author
Name
Daniela Zeppilli
author
Name
Sofie Derycke
Identifier
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3763-6187
Affiliation
Universiteit Gent; Faculteit Wetenschappen; Vakgroep Biologie; Onderzoeksgroep Mariene Biologie
author
Name
Ann Vanreusel
Identifier
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2983-9523
Affiliation
Universiteit Gent; Faculteit Wetenschappen; Vakgroep Biologie; Onderzoeksgroep Mariene Biologie

Links

referenced creativework
type
Handle
accessURL
https://hdl.handle.net/10.3389/fmars.2021.549834

taxonomic terms

taxonomic terms associated with this publication
Nematoda [Nematodes]

Document metadata

date created
2021-05-17
date modified
2021-10-05