Benthic boundary layer

The benthic boundary layer (BBL) is the layer of water directly above the sediment at the bottom of a river, lake or sea. It is generated by the friction of the water moving over the surface of the substrate. The thickness of this zone is determined by many factors including the Coriolis force.

The zone is of interest to biologist, geologists, sedimentologists, oceanographers, physicists and engineers as well as many other scientific disciplines. It is the area of interaction between the two environments and as such is important in many species' reproductive strategies, particularly larvae dispersal. The benthic boundary layer also contains nutrients important in fisheries, a wide array of microscopic life, a variety of suspended materials, and sharp energy gradients. It is also the sink for many anthropogenic substances released into the environment.

Life in the Deep Sea Benthic Boundary Layer

The benthic boundary layer (BBL) represents a few tens of meters of the water column directly above the sea floor[1] and constitutes an important zone of biological activity in the ocean.[2] It plays a vital role in the cycling of matter, and has been called the “endpoint” for sedimenting material, which fuels high metabolic rates for microbial populations.[3] After passing through the BBL, this degraded material is either returned to the water column or mobilized into the sediment, where it may eventually become immobilized. With growing concern over the ultimate fate of matter in the ocean, knowledge of the complex biological processes in the deep sea BBL (deep-BBL) and how they affect future sedimentation and remineralization rates is valuable.

In the deep sea (1800m depth or greater), the BBL is noted as having a near homogenous temperature and salinity with periodic fluxes of detrital or particulate organic matter (POM).[4] This POM is strongly linked to seasonal variations in surface productivity and hydrodynamic conditions.[5] Excluding hydrothermal vents, much of the deep sea benthos is allochthonous,[6][7] and the importance of bacteria for substrate conversion is paramount.[8][9]

While the supply of POM, or marine snow, is relatively limited and inhibits species abundance, it sustains a complex yet understudied microbial loop[10][11] that can maintain both meiofaunal and macrofaunal populations.[12][13] In a study by Will Ritzrau (1996), it was determined that microbial activities were up to a factor of 7.5 higher in the BBL than in adjacent waters.[14] While this study was completed between 100-400m depth, it could have implications for the deep-BBL. Presently, it is known that deep-BBL bacterial populations are able to support protozoan bacterivores like foraminifera and some metazoan zooplankton,[15] which in turn can support larger organisms.[16] Meiofauna and macrofauna found in the deep-BBL include: copepods, annelids, nematodes, bivalves, ostracods, isopods, amphipods, arthropods, and gastropods, to name a few.[17][18] These organisms ultimately play a vital role in the remineralization of matter and aid in breaking down POM that may eventually become permanent sediment.

As the effects of anthropogenic forcing begin taking an even greater toll on marine processes, long-term studies are essential in determining the health and stability of the deep-BBL. Currently, several groups are employing cabled observatories (ALOHA Cabled Observatory, Monterey Accelerated Research System, NEPTUNE, VENUS, and Liquid Jungle Lab (LJL) Panama- PLUTO) to work towards developing these much needed time-series.[19]

References

  1. Joan E. Cartes (1998) "Dynamics of the bathyal Benthic Boundary Layer in the northwestern Mediterranean: depth and temporal variations in macrofaunal–megafaunal communities and their possible connections within deep-sea trophic webs" Progress in Oceanography 41: 111-139
  2. K. Lochte (1992) "Bacterial Standing Stock and Consumption of Organic Carbon in The Benthic Boundary Layer of The Abyssal North Atlantic" Deep-Sea Food Chains and the Global Carbon Cycle 360: 1-10
  3. Bianchi, A., Tholsosan, O., Garcin, J., Polychronaki, T., Tselepides, A., Buscail, R., and G. Duineveld (2003) activities at the benthic boundary layer in the Aegean Sea” Progress in Oceanography 57: 219-236
  4. Carol Turley (2000) "Bacteria in the cold deep-sea benthic boundary layer and sediment–water interface of the NE Atlantic" FEMS Microbiology Ecology 33(2): 89-99
  5. Guidi-Guilvard, L. D., Thistle, D., Khripounoff, A., and S. Gasparini (2009) of benthic copepods and other meiofauna in the benthic boundary layer of the deep NW Mediterranean Sea” Marine Ecology Progress Series 396: 181-195
  6. Jean Claude Sorbe (1999) macrofaunal assemblages within the Benthic Boundary Layer of the Cap-Ferret Canyon (Bay of Biscay, NE Atlantic)” Deep-Sea Research Part II 46: 2309-2329
  7. Joan E. Cartes (1998) "Dynamics of the bathyal Benthic Boundary Layer in the northwestern Mediterranean: depth and temporal variations in macrofaunal–megafaunal communities and their possible connections within deep-sea trophic webs" Progress in Oceanography 41: 111-139
  8. Poremba, K. and H-G. Hoppe (1995) variation of benthic microbial production and hydrolytic enzymatic activity down the continental slope of the Celtic Sea” Marine Ecology Progress Series 118: 237-245
  9. Carol Turley (2000) "Bacteria in the cold deep-sea benthic boundary layer and sediment–water interface of the NE Atlantic" FEMS Microbiology Ecology 33(2): 89-99
  10. Bianchi, A., Tholsosan, O., Garcin, J., Polychronaki, T., Tselepides, A., Buscail, R., and G. Duineveld (2003) activities at the benthic boundary layer in the Aegean Sea” Progress in Oceanography 57: 219-236
  11. Carol Turley (2000) "Bacteria in the cold deep-sea benthic boundary layer and sediment–water interface of the NE Atlantic" FEMS Microbiology Ecology 33(2): 89-99
  12. Guidi-Guilvard, L. D., Thistle, D., Khripounoff, A., and S. Gasparini (2009) of benthic copepods and other meiofauna in the benthic boundary layer of the deep NW Mediterranean Sea” Marine Ecology Progress Series 396: 181-195
  13. Sherman, A., and K. L. Smith Jr. (2009) benthic boundary layer communities and food supply: A long-term monitoring strategy” Deep-Sea Research Part II 56: 1754–1762
  14. Will Ritzrau (1996) ACTIVITY IN THE BENTHIC BOUNDARY LAYER: SMALL-SCALE DISTRIBUTION AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO THE HYDRODYNAMIC REGIME” Journal of Sea Research 36 (3/4): 171-180
  15. Munn, C. (2004) ["Marine Microbiology, Ecology and Applications"] 1859962882: 161
  16. Guidi-Guilvard, L. D., Thistle, D., Khripounoff, A., and S. Gasparini (2009) of benthic copepods and other meiofauna in the benthic boundary layer of the deep NW Mediterranean Sea” Marine Ecology Progress Series 396: 181-195
  17. Jean Claude Sorbe (1999) macrofaunal assemblages within the Benthic Boundary Layer of the Cap-Ferret Canyon (Bay of Biscay, NE Atlantic)” Deep-Sea Research Part II 46: 2309-2329
  18. Sherman, A., and K. L. Smith Jr. (2009) benthic boundary layer communities and food supply: A long-term monitoring strategy” Deep-Sea Research Part II 56: 1754–1762
  19. Sherman, A., and K. L. Smith Jr. (2009) benthic boundary layer communities and food supply: A long-term monitoring strategy” Deep-Sea Research Part II 56: 1754–1762

Sources

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