Deep-Sea Research, Vol. 36, No. 10, pp. 1567-1577, 1989. 0198-0149/89 $3.00 + 0.00
Printed in Great Britain. © 1989 Pergamon Press plc.
Meiobenthos of the Hatteras Abyssal Plain and Puerto Rico Trench:
abundance, biomass and associations with bacteria and
particulate fluxes
JOHN H. TIETJEN,* JODY W. DEMING,t GILBERT T. ROWE,~ STEPHEN MACKO§
and RICHARD J. WILKEII
(Received 20 May 1988; in revisedform 13 April 1989; accepted 21 April 1989)
Abstract--An abyssal station on the Hatteras Abyssal Plain (5411 m) and two hadal stations in
the Puerto Rico Trench (7460 and 8189 m) were sampled to obtain quantitative information on
the abundance and biomass of metazoan meiofauna and, for comparative purposes, bacteria and
measurements of particulate flux rates. Average mciofauna abundance (no./10 cm2 +_ 1 S.E.
integrated over a sediment depth of 15 cm) was lowest at the 7460 m site (44 + 10) and highest at
the 8189 m (96 + 15) and Hatteras sites (114 + 26), the latter two not being statistically
significant from each other. Biomasses (l~g dry wt/10 cm2 + 1 S.E., also integrated over a 15 cm
depth) at the Hatteras and 7460 and 8189 m Trench sites were 38.4 + 10.3, 3.8 + 1.6 and 14.3 +
5.1, respectively; all differences were statistically significant. High biomass at the Hatteras site
was due to large, burrowing harpacticoid copepods that were found to depths of 10-15 cm below
the sediment surface, and which were most abundant below the surface (0-2 cm) layer of
sediment. Nematodes, the numerically dominant taxon, were most abundant in the upper 6 cm of
sediment at all sites, as were copepods at the two Trench sites. Average abundances of bacteria
9 2
(no. of cells x 10 per 10 cm of sediment to a depth of 15 cm), determined by epifluorescence
microscopy, were 11.0, 10.5 and 5.6 at the Hatteras, 7460 and 8189 m Trench sites, respectively.
Flux rates of organic carbon and total nitrogen (rag m -2 day-1) were about four times higher at the
Hatteras site (e.g. 25.8 and 3.8) than at the 7460 m site in the Trench (6.3 and 0.8). An analysis of
the meiofannal and bacterial abundances obtained at the three sites revealed no significant
associations between the two organismal groups, though abundances of both groups did decrease
significantly and predictably with sediment depth at each station. Associations between particu-
late flux rates and meiofauna biomass were highly significant, suggesting that flux rates measured
in near-bottom traps may be useful indicators of general resources available to the meiobenthos.
INTRODUCTION
QUANTITATIVE information on the metazoan meiobenthos from the oceans' hadal regions
is limited to three published reports. Samples from the Puerto Rico Trench (8560 m;
GEORGE and HIGGn~S, 1979), Philippine Trench (9807 m; THIEL, 1979) and Ogasawara
Trench (8260 m; SHIRAVAMA,1984a) contained abundances ranging from 17 to 430
individuals per 10 cm2. Recent studies (TmEL, 1979; SHIRAVAMA, 1984a; I~AI,~KUCHE,
1985; WOODS and TIETJEN, 1985; THIEL et al., 1987; ALONOI and PIOtON, 1988) have
* Department of Biology, City College of New York, New York, NY 10031, U.S.A.
t School of Oceanography, WB-10, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, U.S.A.
1: Department of Oceanography, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, U.S.A.
§ Departments of Earth Science and Chemistry, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. Johns,
Newfoundland, Canada AIB 3X5.
[[ Brookhaven National Laboratory, Oceanographic Science Division, Upton, NY 11973, U.S.A.
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