Data

Physical Controls on Coral Communities on the George V Land Slope: Some Working Hypotheses

data.gov.au
Geoscience Australia (Owned by)
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=http://data.gov.au/dataset/af375d39-5317-4d9b-8a8f-888f4fcd598e&rft.title=Physical Controls on Coral Communities on the George V Land Slope: Some Working Hypotheses&rft.identifier=physical-controls-on-coral-communities-on-the-george-v-land-slope-some-working-hypotheses&rft.publisher=data.gov.au&rft.description=Obtain the CCAMLR Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems Workshop volume - Obtain the CCAMLR Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems Workshop volumeDense coral-sponge communities on the upper continental slope off George V Land have been identified as a Vulnerable Marine Ecosystem in the Antarctic. The challenge is now to understand their likely distribution. The CEAMARC survey found these communities at sites on the upper slope in depths of 570 - 950m. Based on these results we propose some working hypotheses defining the physical settings suitable for such assemblages. Icebergs scour to 500m in this region and the lack of such disturbance is probably a factor allowing growth of rich benthic ecosystems. In addition, the richest communities are found in the heads of canyons. We suggest two possible oceanographic mechanisms linking abundant filter feeder communities and canyon heads. The canyons in which they occur receive descending plumes of Antarctic Bottom Water formed on the George V shelf and these water masses could entrain abundant food for the benthos. Maps of water properties measured during the Collaborative East Antarctic Marine Census (CEAMARC) survey provide some support for this idea. Another possibility is that the canyons harbouring rich benthos are those that cut the shelf break. Such canyons are known sites of high productivity in other areas because of a number of oceanographic factors, including strong current flow and increased mixing, and the abrupt, complex topography. These hypotheses provide a framework for the identification of areas where there is a higher likelihood of encountering these Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems.\n\nYou can also purchase hard copies of Geoscience Australia data and other products at http://www.ga.gov.au/products-services/how-to-order-products/sales-centre.html&rft.creator=Geoscience Australia&rft.date=2023&rft.coverage=139.0,-67.5 147.0,-67.5 147.0,-65.0 139.0,-65.0 139.0,-67.5&rft.coverage=139.0,-67.5 147.0,-67.5 147.0,-65.0 139.0,-65.0 139.0,-67.5&rft.coverage=true&rft_rights=Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0&rft_subject=Antarctic data&rft_subject=Earth Sciences&rft_subject=External Publication&rft_subject=Report&rft_subject=abiotic surrogates&rft_subject=geomorphology&rft_subject=marine&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
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Brief description

Dense coral-sponge communities on the upper continental slope off George V Land have been identified as a Vulnerable Marine Ecosystem in the Antarctic. The challenge is now to understand their likely distribution. The CEAMARC survey found these communities at sites on the upper slope in depths of 570 - 950m. Based on these results we propose some working hypotheses defining the physical settings suitable for such assemblages. Icebergs scour to 500m in this region and the lack of such disturbance is probably a factor allowing growth of rich benthic ecosystems. In addition, the richest communities are found in the heads of canyons. We suggest two possible oceanographic mechanisms linking abundant filter feeder communities and canyon heads. The canyons in which they occur receive descending plumes of Antarctic Bottom Water formed on the George V shelf and these water masses could entrain abundant food for the benthos. Maps of water properties measured during the Collaborative East Antarctic Marine Census (CEAMARC) survey provide some support for this idea. Another possibility is that the canyons harbouring rich benthos are those that cut the shelf break. Such canyons are known sites of high productivity in other areas because of a number of oceanographic factors, including strong current flow and increased mixing, and the abrupt, complex topography. These hypotheses provide a framework for the identification of areas where there is a higher likelihood of encountering these Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems.\n\nYou can also purchase hard copies of Geoscience Australia data and other products at http://www.ga.gov.au/products-services/how-to-order-products/sales-centre.html

Full description

Obtain the CCAMLR Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems Workshop volume - Obtain the CCAMLR Vulnerable Marine Ecosystems Workshop volume

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139,-67.5 147,-67.5 147,-65 139,-65 139,-67.5

143,-66.25

139,-67.5 147,-67.5 147,-65 139,-65 139,-67.5

143,-66.25

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