Saturday, September 7, 2013
Deep ocean canyons around Hawai`i are hot spots for species diversity
Often science
simply confirms what you’d suspect. Example: Life is more interesting in a
complicated landscape than a simple one.
Case in point: You get more life and more kinds of life in the wrinkled landscape of Hawaiian undersea canyons than on the broad flats.
University of
Hawai`i marine researchers determined that biodiversity is significantly higher
in the submarine canyons around Hawai`i than on the flats, largely because the
canyons provide so many more types of habitat, but also because they
concentrate nutrients.
The
researchers reported in the journal Deep Sea Research Part II after 34 dives
with the submersibles Pisces IV and V up and down the archipelago, from the
main Hawaiian Islands to the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument in the
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands.
Their dives took them to study points at multiple depths, the deepest of them near a mile
down. The principal researcher was UH oceanography professor Craig Smith.
In the
canyons, they found both complexity of habit an increased biodiversity.
“Submarine canyons encompass myriad habitat
types. This heterogeneity at the landscape-scale helps to enhance local biodiversity
in canyon seafloor sediments,” said lead author Fabio C. De Leo, a doctoral
graduate from UH Mānoa’s department of oceanography. Species diversity is
considerably higher in canyons, he said.
In canyons,
many things are happening. There are diverse physical habitats. Ocean currents
are channeled. Sinking particles are captured. Too, a lot of the organic
material washed off the islands ends up settling in canyons, where they
decompose and add nutrients to a portion of the ocean normally limited in food
availability.
“When there’s
more food, there’s more life,” De Leo said.
Says the
University press release: “This series of dives was conducted on the Pisces IV and Pisces V
manned submersibles operated by the Hawai‘i Undersea Research Laboratory
(HURL). The research was conducted in
partnership with Hawai‘i Pacific University and the New Zealand National
Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research.”
Here is the
citation: Fabio C. De Leo, E.W. Vetter, C. R. Smith, A. R. Ashley, and M.
McGranaghan. Spatial scale-dependent
habitat heterogeneity influences submarine canyon macrofaunal abundance and
diversity off the Main and Northwest Hawaiian Islands. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in
Oceanography. 11 July 2013.
© Jan
TenBruggencate 2013
Posted by Jan T at 8:13 AM
Labels: Fisheries, Geology, Government, Marine Issues, Oceanography, Reefs, Zoology
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