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Latitudinal changes in siphonophore assemblages across the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean


D. Kuyper
D. Thibault
M.J. Gibbons

Abstract

Siphonophores are commonly considered to be useful indicators of water masses and water-mass movement, but their employment as such across the wider Southern Ocean has not so far been attempted. We redress this here using archived samples, collected during January–February 1993 along a transect from Cape Town to the South African National Antarctic Expedition (SANAE) base in Antarctica, and compare the patterns generated with those determined from a prior analysis of whole assemblages at lower taxonomic resolution. Twenty-one species were identified from 18 of the original 53 samples collected, and two distinct assemblages were confirmed as separated by the Sub-Antarctic Front. That to the south was characterised by low diversity and high abundance and was dominated by cold-water specialists, whereas that to the north comprised a larger number of subtropical and temperate species at low abundance. Assemblage structure was strongly influenced by the mixed layer depth,
sea surface salinity and chlorophyll a concentration, as well as mesozooplankton biomass. Congruence with the whole-assemblage study was high, indicating that this taxon can be suitably employed as a proxy in studies such as this. The study emphasises the value of archived plankton samples and makes a plea for better curation.


Keywords: archived plankton samples, biogeography, Dimophyes arctica, diversity, mesozooplankton biomass, Muggiaea bargmannae, oceanography, Sub-Antarctic Front


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1814-2338
print ISSN: 1814-232X