Deep-sea food bonanzas: early Cenozoic whale-fall communities resemble wood-fall rather than seep communities

Author:

Kiel Steffen12,Goedert James L3

Affiliation:

1. School of Earth and Environment, University of LeedsLeeds LS2 9JT, UK

2. Department of Paleobiology, Smithsonian Natural History MuseumWashington, DC 20013-7012, USA

3. Burke Museum, University of WashingtonSeattle, WA 98195-3010, USA

Abstract

The evolutionary history of invertebrate communities utilizing whale carcasses and sunken wood in the deep-sea is explored using fossil evidence. Compared to modern whale-fall communities, the Eo-Oligocene examples lack those vent-type taxa that most heavily rely on sulphide produced by anaerobic breakdown of bone lipids, but are very similar in their trophic structure to contemporaneous wood-falls. This sheds doubt on the hypothesis that whale-falls were evolutionary stepping stones for taxa that now inhabit hydrothermal vents and seeps. We suggest that the whale-fall communities reported here represent a new ecologic stage among whale-falls, which we have coined the ‘chemosymbiotic opportunist stage’ and that the ‘sulphophilic stage’ of modern whale-falls developed during the Early Miocene, resulting from a significant increase in both body size and/or oil content of bones among cetaceans during this time.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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