Published July 13, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Macrofauna and meiofauna food-web structure from Arctic fjords to deep Arctic Ocean during spring: A stable isotope approach

  • 1. Institute of Oceanology Polish Academy of Sciences
  • 2. UiT The Arctic University of Norway
  • 3. Alfred-Wegener-Institut

Description

The knowledge on benthic trophic relations is particularly important for understanding the functioning of still
pristine and less studied Arctic Ocean ecosystems. This study examines the benthic food-web structure in the
European sector of the Arctic Ocean and assesses if and how it differs along depth gradients in the marginal seaice
zone during spring. Samples of the sediment organic matter were collected in May/June 2015 and May 2016
at stations representing different sedimentary habitats (fjord, shelf, slope/basin), and stable isotopes of δ13C and
δ15N were used to determine macro- and meiofauna food-web structure. Our results show that the food-web
structure differed both among the three studied habitat types and between macro- and meiofauna components
of benthic communities, and that these differences were related to the quality and quantity of organic matter.
Meiofauna in fjords and on the shelf mainly relied on the reworked sediment organic matter while macrofauna
utilized more fresh organic matter, sedimenting to the sea floor. In fjords and on the shelf, benthos displayed a
high degree of omnivory and non-selective feeding while on the slope and in deep basins feeding on higher
trophic levels dominated. In the latter, benthos seemed also to have utilized highly reworked organic matter. As
the organic matter quantity and quality were major drivers of trophic relations in all studied areas, the benthic
food webs will likely face cascading effects following the modification of pelagic food webs due to climatic
changes.

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Funding

ECOTIP – Arctic biodiversity change and its consequences: Assessing, monitoring and predicting the effects of ecosystem tipping cascades on marine ecosystem services and dependent human systems 869383
European Commission