Planned intervention: On Thursday 19/09 between 05:30-06:30 (UTC), Zenodo will be unavailable because of a scheduled upgrade in our storage cluster.
Published September 28, 2020 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Massive silicon utilization facilitated by a benthic‐pelagic coupled feedback sustains deep‐sea sponge aggregations

  • 1. Department of Marine Ecology, Center for Advanced Studies of Blanes (CEAB-CSIC), Girona, Spain
  • 2. Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada
  • 3. Department of Ocean System Sciences, NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research and Utrecht University, Den Burg, The Netherlands

Description

ABSTRACT

Biogeochemical cycling of silicon (Si), largely affected by biological drivers, is pivotal to the ecological functioning of the ocean. Most knowledge regarding biological utilization of Si derives from research on phototrophic organisms circumscribed to the photic ocean (i.e., diatoms). Utilization of Si in the aphotic ocean, where heterotrophic silicifiers become relevant Si users, remains poorly investigated. Here we quantify the flux rates and stocks characterizing Si cycling across dense aggregations of the hexactinellid sponge Vazella pourtalesii established in the aphotic zone of the central Scotian Shelf, Nova Scotia, Canada. Although individual rates of silicic acid consumption were low compared to other sponge species and diatoms, the large abundance of individuals (6.5 million) over the extension of these sponge grounds (2105 km2) leads to massive annual silicic acid consumption, invested in producing their siliceous skeletons of biogenic silica. This sponge activity accumulates large biogenic silica stocks both in the living population and in the sediments. Skeletal pieces in sediment revealed that a good portion of biogenic silica deposited to the bottom after sponge death recycles as silicic acid before being permanently buried. This biogenic silica–silicic acid turnover, facilitated by an unconventional silicification pattern that favors delamination and dissolution of V. pourtalesii spicules, causes silicic acid enrichment at oceanographic dimensions in the bottom water of the central Scotian Shelf. Silicic acid efflux from the bottom sustains a feedback mechanism that fulfills sponge needs for silicic acid and facilitates the persistence of sponge aggregations in the long term.

Notes

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We thank officers and crew of Canadian Coast Guard Ships Martha L. Black and Hudson as well as the engineering teams of the ROVs Spec- trum and ROPOS. Celia Sitjà, Marta García-Puig and Cristina Galobart, from the CEAB-CSIC, are thanked for their help in obtaining the morpho- metric parameters of the sponges and the quantification of the silica in the sediments. We thank Barry MacDonald for help with logistics during sponge collection and maintenance in experimental conditions at Bedford Institute of Oceanography-Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Sarah Thompson for the analysis of the ROV ROPOS video footage, and Javier Murillo for logistic support at Bedford Institute of Oceanography-Fisheries and Oceans Canada. Zeliang Wang and Brian Petrie are thanked for critical reading, comments and suggestions on earlier versions of this manuscript. This research was completed by funds from the SponGES H2020 grant (BG-01-2015.2. Agreement Number 679849-2), from Fisheries and Oceans Canada SPERA and IGS projects to EK, and from MINECO PBS project (CTM2015-67221-R) to MM. This study is in memory of Professor Henry Reiswig, who devoted his scientific life to research on hexactinellid sponges and passed away on 7 March 2020, at age of 84, while still work- ing on "his hexactinellids."

Files

Maldonado et al _2020_lno.11610.pdf

Files (15.3 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:de8635e23846d7bf2c8c4387e3b4ca0b
15.3 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Funding

SponGES – Deep-sea Sponge Grounds Ecosystems of the North Atlantic: an integrated approach towards their preservation and sustainable exploitation 679849
European Commission