Particle flux in the Rainbow hydrothermal vent field (Mid-Atlantic Ridge): Dynamics, mineral and biological composition

Type Article
Date 2001-07
Language English
Author(s) Khripounoff AlexisORCID, Vangriesheim Annick, Crassous Philippe, Segonzac Michel, Colaco Ana, Desbruyeres Daniel, Barthelemy Roxane
Affiliation(s) IFREMER, Ctr Brest, Dept DRO EP, F-29280 Plouzane, France.
IMAR, Lab Maritimo Guia, Fac Ciencias Lisboa, P-2750 Cascais, Portugal.
Univ Aix Marseille 1, Lab Biol Anim, F-13331 Marseille, France.
Source Journal of Marine Research (0022-2402) (Yale University), 2001-07 , Vol. 59 , N. 4 , P. 633-656
WOS© Times Cited 29
Keyword(s) Zooplankton, Biochemistry, Geochemistry, Particle flux, Hydrothermal vent
Abstract In order to provide information about the export and the distribution of hydrothermal particulate material to the surrounding deep ocean, four moorings were deployed in the vicinity of the hydrothermal Rainbow vent field (Mid-Atlantic Ridge, 36 degrees 14'N, 2250 m depth). The first mooring was a sediment trap with a current meter deployed at 2 m from a chimney of the Rainbow vent field and 1.5 m above the bottom (a.b.) for 16 days. It represented the reference for the initial composition of particles produced by the vent. The total mean mass particle flux (6.9 g m(-2) d(-1)) was distinctly higher than the flux measured at the shallower hydrothermal vents on the MAR segment. This particulate flux showed a high temporal variation at the scale of a few days and was characterized by a high concentration of sulphur (17.2%) and copper (3.5%) and a very low concentration of organic carbon (0.14%). Several hundred bivalve larvae belonging to the hydrothermal mytilid Bathymodiohis azoricus were collected in this trap at the beginning of the experiment. The density of larvae decreased strongly at the end, indicating a patchiness distribution or a discontinuous reproduction of this species. The other three moorings, including sediment traps, current-meters and thermistor chains, were deployed for 304 days at different distances and altitudes from the Rainbow vent field. The mean speed of the current in the rift valley was low (6 cm s(-1)) and was oriented toward the north. The total mean particle mass flux measured with the five sediment traps varied little, from 10.6 to 25.0 mg m m(-2) d(-1), and displayed temporal variations which are typical of deep-sea environments with seasonal changes in the overlying production. However, in the trap at 500 m from the vents 150 m a.b., the presence of the hydrothermal plume can be observed: the sulphur, iron and copper concentrations of particles were significantly higher compared to the particles sampled in the pelagic reference trap. The plume composition was about 50% hydrothermal particles and 50% pelagic particles and its upper limit reached 300 m a.b. at this distance. In the traps at 1000 m from the vents, the elemental composition of particles was similar to the pelagic particles and we assume that these traps were not in the plume during the experiment. The zooplankton obtained in the long-term trap samples revealed high density variations in relation to the distance from the vent site. The nutrient enrichment around the hydrothermal area and the abundance of free living bacteria explain these variations in zooplankton density.
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Khripounoff Alexis, Vangriesheim Annick, Crassous Philippe, Segonzac Michel, Colaco Ana, Desbruyeres Daniel, Barthelemy Roxane (2001). Particle flux in the Rainbow hydrothermal vent field (Mid-Atlantic Ridge): Dynamics, mineral and biological composition. Journal of Marine Research, 59(4), 633-656. Open Access version : https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00000/801/