
ON THE DISCOVERY OF A LARGE MICROBIAL COMMUNITY LIVING IN THE SOFT BOTTOMS OF THE CONTINENTAL SHELF OFF CHILE AND PERU
Author(s) -
Víctor A. Gallardo
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
boletin de investigaciones marinas y costeras/boletín de investigaciones marinas y costeras
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.177
H-Index - 14
eISSN - 2590-4671
pISSN - 0122-9761
DOI - 10.25268/bimc.invemar.1967.1.0.610
Subject(s) - benthic zone , continental shelf , benthos , oceanography , bay , sediment , shrimp , geography , fishery , biomass (ecology) , ecology , environmental science , geology , biology , paleontology
In a benthic macrofaunal survey of the continental shelf of northern Chile a peculiar filamentous material was collected in grab and dredge samples of greenish, foul smelling sediment from depths of 50 to 280 m (ref. 1). In reporting the results emphasis was placed, however, on the fact that a virtually iazoic* bottom had beenfound between depths of 50 to 400 m. Average biomass was only 0.17 g (wet weight) /m2 , with 6.6 individuals /m2*. The distribution of the azoic sediments coincided with low oxygen concentrations in the water above (ref. 2). The author again found white filamentous material while sampling the benthos off the Bay of Concepcion and the Gulf of Arauco, in central Chile. These findings together with the casual observation of filaments in the mouth parts of the commercially important galatheid shrimp Pleuroncodes mondon, initiated new efforts to learn about this material and its possible ecological significance.