Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- PART I The development of deep-sea biology, the physical environment and methods of study
- PART II Organisms of the deep-sea benthic boundary
- PART III Patterns in space
- PART IV Processes: patterns in time
- 11 Food resources, energetics and feeding strategies
- 12 Metabolic processes: microbial ecology, and organism and community respiration at the deep-sea bed
- 13 Reproduction, recruitment and growth of deep-sea organisms
- 14 Animal–sediment relations in the deep sea
- PART V Parallel systems and anthropogenic effects
- References
- Species index
- Subject index
11 - Food resources, energetics and feeding strategies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- PART I The development of deep-sea biology, the physical environment and methods of study
- PART II Organisms of the deep-sea benthic boundary
- PART III Patterns in space
- PART IV Processes: patterns in time
- 11 Food resources, energetics and feeding strategies
- 12 Metabolic processes: microbial ecology, and organism and community respiration at the deep-sea bed
- 13 Reproduction, recruitment and growth of deep-sea organisms
- 14 Animal–sediment relations in the deep sea
- PART V Parallel systems and anthropogenic effects
- References
- Species index
- Subject index
Summary
SOURCES OF FOOD
Possibly the most important limiting factor in deep-sea ecology is food availability. All production in the deep sea, except at hydrothermal vents (see Chapter 15), is fuelled, either directly or indirectly, by the import of organic matter to the bottom, the major part consisting of ‘new’ production sinking from the process of carbon production by photosynthesis in the euphotic zone. This dependency on organic import make it an allochthonous, rather than autochthonous (such as the hydrothermal vents), system. Rowe & Staresinic (1979) and Rowe (1981) have outlined the pathways by which the various forms of organic matter, as a food source, enter the deep sea (Fig. 11.1). Particulate Organic Matter (POM) includes both large food-falls, consisting of animal carcases along with terrigenous and coastal plant debris, as well as fine particulate organic matter mostly from planktonic animals, including faecal pellets and moults, and phy-toplankton. In addition, sediments, particularly those in reducing conditions, have been found to contain a relatively large fraction of Dissolved Organic Matter (DOM). This, it has been argued, also constitutes a significant food source for some biota.
LARGE FOOD-FALLS: ANIMAL CARCASES
These include the bodies of large vertebrates such as marine mammals and fish, and large invertebrates such as squid. In an early review of the characteristics of the deep-sea environment, Bruun (1957) suggested the importance of the sinking of whale and shark remains as a food source, although no direct observations were available at that date.
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- Deep-Sea BiologyA Natural History of Organisms at the Deep-Sea Floor, pp. 263 - 282Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991
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