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Sponges of the Lazarev and Weddell Sea, Antarctica: explanations for their patchy occurrence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2004

Julian Gutt
Affiliation:
Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine ResearchColumbusstraße, D-27568 Bremerhaven, Germany
Vladimir M. Koltun
Affiliation:
Zoological Institute, Universitetskaja Emb. 1, St. Petersburg 199034, Russia

Abstract

Seventy-three sponge species were caught at 23 stations on the continental shelf of the Lazarev and Weddell Sea (Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean). Tedania tantula was the most often found species amongst the 63 demosponge species caught and among the five hexactinellid species Rossella racovitzae was most common. The stations were classified according to their species inventory, and so the individual stations of the resulting four groups were rather uniformly dispersed over the entire investigation area. The species composition of adjacent stations varied considerably. There was no discernible relationship between the biological set of data and any combination of the available environmental characteristics of the stations. The sponge fauna of the, so far very poorly investigated, Lazarev Sea did not differ considerably from that of the adjacent Weddell Sea. The only species to be recorded for the first time on the Antarctic continental shelf were Homaxinella flagelliformis and Hyrtios arenosa. Small scale environmental events such as iceberg scouring, or biological characteristics such as extremely slow growth and budding reproduction are thought to generate the patchy distribution pattern.

Type
Papers—Life Sciences and Oceanography
Copyright
© Antarctic Science Ltd 1995

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