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Original Articles

Deep-water amphipods from the Catalan Sea slope (western Mediterranean): Bathymetric distribution, assemblage composition and biological characteristics

Pages 1133-1158 | Published online: 03 Dec 2010
 

Abstract

Deep-water epibenthic/suprabenthic species of Amphipoda were studied in the Catalan Sea (north-western Mediterranean) at depths from 389 to 1859 m. In four cruises 20 samples were effected during 1991–1992, covering four different seasonal periods (March, April, July and December). A minimum total of 82 species was collected. Ampelisca uncinata and Eusirus leptocarpus were newly recorded as components of the Mediterranean fauna while three other species collected (Bathymedon sp. A, Autonoe sp. and Rhachotropis cf. gracilis) had distinct possibilities to be new species. The Gammaridae Carangoliopsis spinulosa and the Oedicerotidae Synchelidium maculatum were the two main dominant species on the upper slope level (389-506 m). On the middle slope (between 549-601 m), dominance by any few species was not apparent; the Eusiridae Rhachotropis glabra and R. caeca together with Bathymedon acutifrons, Scopelocheirus hopei and Andaniexis mimonectes were the most abundant species. On the lower slope, at depth below 1000 m, R. caeca was the largely dominant species. The highest species richness (ST) was reported at intermediate depths over the middle slope (63 species), decreasing with depth increase, and being particularly low at 1808–1859 m (19 species). Total amphipod densities were also higher at the upper and middle slope levels (1760.2–2613.9 amphipods/1000 m3) than below 1000 m (376.4–679.2 amphipods/1000 m3). The low swimming coefficients (Kt) of bathyal Gammaridea, ranging between 0 and 0.336, indicate their relationship to the water-sediment interface although interespecific differences in Kt in relation to species size were also reported. Almost all the dominant amphipods had recruits (=smallest juveniles) in two or three of the three seasons sampled (mainly in March and December), and the smallest juveniles were often only abundant in two of these seasons. This indicates that most species had more than one generation per year, probably suggesting bivoltinism, a commonly adopted biological strategy among intertidal, littoral and shallow water amphipods, as the commonest strategy adopted by the mid-bathyal amphipods in our study.

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