A new CALMAR benthic chamber operating by submersible: First application in the cold-seep environment of Napoli mud volcano (Mediterranean Sea)

Archive ouverte

Caprais, Jean-Claude | Lanteri, Nadine | Crassous, Philippe | Noel, Philippe | Bignon, Laurent | Rousseaux, Patrick | Pignet, Patricia | Khripounoff, Alexis

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley -

International audience. A new submersible-operated benthic chamber has been developed to measure benthic organism metabolism and chemical exchange rates at the sediment-water interface up to 6000 m depth. This equipment can be used everywhere on soft sediment, but particularly to deploy it on small area reached only by submersible-like cold seep. The chamber, 41 cm diameter cylinder, includes six 100 mL-sampling cells to isolate aliquots, which are sampled at predetermined intervals and an oxygen-optode probe. This chamber named CALMAR (Chambre Autonome Légère MAnipulable par ROV) was used for the first time during the Medeco cruise (2007) in Eastern Mediterranean Sea. It allowed measurement of fluxes of oxygen, dissolved inorganic carbon, and methane on the Napoli mud volcano site. Two benthic chambers were deployed with the ROV Victor, respectively, on small, active, cold seep colonized by Siboglinidae worms and mussels (Station A), and at about 3 m from the first where no visible animals were observed (Station B). The oxygen flux was 35 mmol O2 m-2 d-1 in sediment colonized by large organisms (Station A) and 13.5 mmol O2 m-2 d-1 on the inactive area (CALMAR B). In terms of inorganic carbon, the fluxes were 34 and 10.5 mmol m-2 d-1, respectively, at A and B, and the calculated respiratory coefficient was 0.97 at A and 0.78 at B. The methane flux was only observed on the Siboglinidae colony (3 mmol m-2 d-1) and not on Station B.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Deep cold-water coral ecosystems in the Brittany submarine canyons (Northeast Atlantic): Hydrodynamics, particle supply, respiration, and carbon cycling

Archive ouverte | Khripounoff, Alexis | CCSD

The submarine canyons of the Brittany continental slope (Bay of Biscay–Northeast Atlantic) were studied to describe the conditions in which cold-water corals occur in these areas and their consequences for coral metabolism. Near-b...

Respiration of bivalves from three different deep-sea areas: cold seeps, hydrothermal vents and organic carbon-rich sediments

Archive ouverte | Khripounoff, Alexis | CCSD

International audience. We studied bivalves (vesicomyids and mytilids) inhabiting four different areas of high sulfide and methane production: 1) in the Gulf of Guinea, two pockmarks (650 m and 3150 m depth) and one...

First respiration estimates of cold-seep vesicomyid bivalves from in situ total oxygen uptake measurements

Archive ouverte | Decker, Carole | CCSD

Vesicomyid bivalves are one of the most abundant symbiont-bearing species inhabiting deep-sea reducing ecosystems. Nevertheless, except for the hydrothermal vent clam Calyptogena magnifica, their metabolic rates have not been docu...

Chargement des enrichissements...