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Community structure comparisons of lower slope hydrocarbon seeps, northern Gulf of Mexico

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TLDR
In this article, the authors collected from ROV JASON III on randomized transects (generally 10 per site) was used to compare seven suspected hydrocarbon seeps on the lower continental slope at depths of 956 to 2330 m.
Abstract
Photographic sampling collected from ROV JASON III on randomized transects (generally 10 per site) was used to compare seven suspected hydrocarbon seeps on the lower continental slope at depths of 956 to 2330 m. The study design focused on areas containing high-amplitude reflectance patterns in seismic returns from the bottom. Animal samples nested in these areas and high-resolution photographic mosaics permitted fine-scale description of the community components and their associations with each other. The transect results showed three types of chemosynthetic community: carbonate prone, brine pool prone, and low-density. These communities are characterized by, respectively, abundant carbonate rubble and tubeworm clusters, bacterial mats and brine pools, and relatively sparse chemosynthetic fauna that tended to be overlooked by the photographic survey plan. These differences were not clearly related to depth or longitude because the sites are at the opposite eastern and western extents of the project region. Photographic survey is a statistically reliable method for detecting the carbonate rubble and bacterial mat types of community, but may be unreliable for sparse or clustered fauna such as seep mussels. Photographic survey results provided relatively low taxonomic resolution, but were sufficient to distinguish statistical differences in the abundance of characteristic faunal groups, such as the Echinoidea and Gorgonacea, associated with hydrocarbon seeps. Initial studies of statistical power indicate that future photographic surveys of suspected seep communities, if conducted with an equivalent level of effort, might detect the presence of more abundant habitat, including carbonate rubble, bacterial mats, and tubeworms, but could miss less abundant indicators.

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Tracing the evolution of seep fluids from authigenic carbonates: Green Canyon, northern Gulf of Mexico

TL;DR: Authigenic carbonates from hydrocarbon seeps are unique long-term archives of past fluid flow and are used to assess the evolution of seep activity and potential driving forces.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid change with depth in megabenthic structure-forming communities of the Makapu'u deep-sea coral bed

TL;DR: Video analysis of the Makapu'u deep-sea coral bed yields new insight on the spatial ecology of seamounts, pointing out that community changes can occur over narrow depth ranges and that communities can be structured by small-scale physiography.
Journal ArticleDOI

Occurrence and biodegradation of hydrocarbons at high salinities.

TL;DR: This work describes hypersaline environments potentially or likely to become contaminated with hydrocarbons, including perennial and transient environments above and below ground, and discusses what is known about the microbes degrading hydroCarbons and the extent of their activities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cold seeps in a warming Arctic: Insights for benthic ecology

TL;DR: In the Arctic Ocean, cold seep communities are characterized by a lack of large specialized chemo-obligate polychaetes and molluscs often seen at non-Arctic seeps, but nonetheless have substantially higher benthic abundance and biomass compared to adjacent areas lacking seeps as discussed by the authors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Submarine Thermal Springs on the Galápagos Rift

TL;DR: It is suggested that two-thirds of the heat lost from new oceanic lithosphere at the Gal�pagos Rift in the first million years may be vented from thermal springs, predominantly along the axial ridge within the rift valley.

Deep-Sea Research II

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the Pakistan continental margin to assess the controls on organic matter deposition and quality along a transect through the OMZ from water depths of 140-1850 m.
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Clustering of suspension-feeding macrobenthos near abyssal hydrothermal vents at oceanic spreading centers

TL;DR: A community of abundant suspension-feeding organisms was photographed around an active hydrothermal vent at the Galapagos Rift as mentioned in this paper, and the high standing crop of macrobenthos in these patches probably results from local increases of deep-sea food supply near hydro-thermal plumes in the bottom water.
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Vent-type taxa in a hydrocarbon seep region on the Louisiana slope

TL;DR: In this article, the discovery of large epi-and infaunal communities associated with regions of oil and gas seepage on the Louisiana continental slope was reported, which are similar to those associated with the vents of the Galapagos Rift in the Pacific and the hypersaline brine seeps of the Florida Escarpment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence of episodic fluid, gas, and sediment venting on the northern Gulf of Mexico continental slope

TL;DR: In this paper, a summary of vent-seeparture-related phenomena is presented, which suggests that sediment input from the shelf margin associated with cyclic Plio-Pleistocene falling to low sea-level periods, followed by major listic fault and salt adjustments to a new sediment load have activated venting-sepage throughout this period and perhaps longer, and Radiometric dating suggests that other long-term episodes of venting and major venting expulsion events are also probably modulated by sea level change, time scales of thousands of years in response
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