Time-series benthic community composition and biomass and associated environmental characteristics in the Chukchi Sea during the RUSALCA 2004–2012 program
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/8640Date
2015-09Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Grebmeier, Jacqueline M.; Bluhm, Bodil; Cooper, Lee W.; Denisenko, Stanislav G.; Iken, Katrin; Kedra, Monika; Serratos, CarlosAbstract
Benthic macrofaunal and epifaunal composition and biomass and
associated environmental drivers were evaluated for time-series stations occupied
during three cruises of the RUSALCA (Russian-American Long-term Census of the
Arctic) program undertaken in August 2004, September 2009, and September 2012.
We focus on the benthic communities collected at repeat stations in the southern
Chukchi Sea and the key environmental characteristics that could influence benthic
population structure and biomass. These characteristics included bottom water
temperature, salinity, and chlorophyll a (chl a); integrated chl a; export production via
sediment oxygen uptake rates as an indicator of food supply to the benthos; and surface
sediment parameters that are known to influence benthic population community
composition and biomass, such as grain size, carbon content, and chl a. Overall, both
the macrofaunal and epibenthic community composition at the time-series sites in the
southern Chukchi Sea have remained relatively constant over the time period of this
study (2004–2012). However, some of the more sedentary macrofauna are showing
significant declines in biomass since 2004, particularly in the center of a macrobenthic
hotpot that has been persistent for decades in the southern Chukchi Sea. While
biomass estimates were more variable for the more motile epibenthic fauna, there was
also an indication of declining epifaunal biomass since 2009. We highlight here as a
case study the benthic time-series efforts during RUSALCA that are also part of the
Distributed Biological Observatory (DBO) international network, which is tracking
the status and trends of Arctic ecosystem response to the changing physical drivers in
the southern Chukchi Sea.
Description
Published version also available at http://dx.doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2015.61