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Food-web dynamics and isotopic niches in deep-sea communities residing in a submarine canyon and on the adjacent open slopes

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2011-06-07
End Date
2013-08-25

Citation

Demopoulos, A.W.J., McClain-Counts, J.P., Ross, S.W., Brooke, Sandra, and Mienis, Furu, 2017, Food-web dynamics and isotopic niches in deep-sea communities residing in a submarine canyon and on the adjacent open slopes: US Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/F71N7Z9R.

Summary

Examination of food webs and trophic niches provide insight into organisms’ functional ecology, yet few studies have examined the trophodynamics within submarine canyons, where the interaction of morphology and oceanography influences food deposition. Stable isotope analysis and Bayesian ellipses documented deep-sea food web structure and trophic niches in Baltimore Canyon and the adjacent open slopes in the U.S. Mid-Atlantic Region. Results revealed isotopically diverse feeding groups, comprising approximately 5 trophic levels. Regression analysis indicated that consumer isotope data are structured by site (canyon vs. slope), feeding group, and depth. Benthic feeders were enriched in 13C and 15N relative to suspension feeders, consistent [...]

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BCpaper_DataRelease_revised.csv 184.3 KB text/csv

Purpose

Data were obtained in order to assess the trophic ecology of fauna in a submarine canyon to inform conservation and management decisions

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  • USGS Data Release Products
  • USGS Wetland and Aquatic Research Center

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DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/F71N7Z9R

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