Hydrothermal vent fauna of the western Pacific Ocean: Distribution patterns and biogeographic networks

Author:

Tunnicliffe Verena1ORCID,Chen Chong2ORCID,Giguère Thomas3ORCID,Rowden Ashley Alun45ORCID,Watanabe Hiromi Kayama2ORCID,Brunner Otis6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology and School of Earth & Ocean Sciences University of Victoria Victoria British Columbia Canada

2. X‐STAR, Japan Agency for Marine‐Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) Yokosuka Japan

3. Marine Environmental Services, Archipelago Marine Research Ltd. Victoria British Columbia Canada

4. National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research Wellington New Zealand

5. Victoria University of Wellington Wellington New Zealand

6. British Antarctic Survey Cambridge UK

Abstract

AbstractAimDeep‐sea hydrothermal vent habitats support a low‐diversity fauna in which most species are unique to the ecosystem. To inform conservation planning around this vulnerable marine ecosystem, we examine species distributions over a wide area to assess the underlying beta‐diversity components and to examine biogeographic patterns. We assess the concept of a highly connected fauna that would repopulate areas of local extinction from distal locations.LocationWestern Pacific Ocean from Japan to New Zealand.MethodsWe assemble a database of 295 confirmed species records for 11 western Pacific vent systems. The SET beta‐diversity framework supports query of the distribution of pairwise pattern components in comparisons among vent systems. We build a network based in graph theory to examine connectivity among vent systems based on shared species similarity. A bipartite network revealed the relative role of each species in linkages among vent system nodes. We assess the importance of sampling bias and distance between systems.ResultsOverall, two‐thirds of the taxa are restricted to a single basin or arc. The Mariana Trough system has the highest corrected weighted endemism for vent‐specific species, followed by that of the Okinawa Trough. Species replacement is the dominant feature of beta‐diversity. Eleven vent systems form seven network modules with stronger connectivity in the Southwest than Northwest Pacific. The Manus Basin vent system emerges as a network ‘hub’ reflecting its central geographic near the equator.Main ConclusionTwo western Pacific biogeographic provinces arise, north and south of the equator that few species transcend. Local and regional conservation plans should consider the low network connectivity and high system endemism in management of hydrothermal vent ecosystems in the event of seabed mining. Species recruitment is unlikely to transcend vent system boundaries. We identify Okinawa Trough, Mariana Trough, Manus Basin, Feni‐Tabar Arc and Kermadec Arc for development of conservation plans that initiate or expand protection.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference87 articles.

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2. Chirostylid and Galatheid Crustaceans (Decapoda: Anomura) from active thermal vent areas in the southwest Pacific;Baba K.;Scientia Marina,1992

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4. A comparison of network and clustering methods to detect biogeographical regions

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