Bruno Danis on ANDEEP’s Discovery of New Antarctic Species Biodiversity and SCAR-MarBIN
21 May 2007 - Interviews, Logistics, Flora & Fauna, Antarctic
Dr. Bruno Danis of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences recently agreed to be interviewed by SciencePoles concerning the approximately 700 new marine species that have been found in the depths (from 700 m up to 6.3 km) of the Weddell and Scotia Seas off of Antarctica during the three ANDEEP expeditions that took place between 2002 and 2005.
Dr. Danis took part in the third and most recent of the Antarctic benthic deep-sea biodiversity (ANDEEP) expeditions and will be in charge of the access to biodiversity data that has been taken from all three expeditions. He is the Project Manager of SCAR-MarBIN (Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research Marine Biodiversity Information Network).
Is there anything particularly special about the discovery of 700 or so new species at the bottom of the Weddell and Scotia Seas?
The most important finding is the very high level of biodiversity we've discovered. That's the main message from the paper. For most of the taxonomical groups we worked on, we've found large numbers of species totally new to science. For some groups, we've even discovered some new families. Each taxonomical group displayed a variable, but always significant, proportion of new species. For example, if you consider only the isopods we sampled, almost 600 species are new to science.
You had previously believed that the ocean floor of the Weddell and Scotia Seas had been lifeless until the findings of the ANDEEP project. Why?
I guess it's mainly because the regions we were looking at had been drastically under-sampled. Until the ANDEEP project, there had never been any major sampling efforts in the region, apart from occasional Russian and American expeditions. The ANDEEP expeditions have brought entirely new insight regarding this issue, because results have show that the actual picture is contrary to what is traditionally believed regarding the relationship between biodiversity and depth. People usually think that the deeper you go, the less biodiversity you find. This is actually not the case. Even if the abundance in the deep Weddell Sea is lower compared to the shelf, there is a considerable level of diversity, especially if you take the sampling efforts of the ANDEEP expeditions into account, which is small compared to expeditions which have focused on the shelf assemblages in Antarctica.
As the Weddell and Scotia Seas are places of deepwater formation in the earth's system of oceanic currents, were you able to glean any information regarding the evolutionary processes of the species inhabiting this region of the ocean and how these species are related to other species living in other regions of the earth's oceans?
This is a very complex topic. We can't get a simple picture of the evolution of these animals, and a simple explanation won't fit all groups of organisms living in the Weddell and Scotia Seas. We found that some communities, for example, have a composition similar to other deep-sea communities, while we would find the opposite in other groups. This suggests the origin of the species we sampled during ANDEEP is a complex combination between the deep sea and the Antarctic continental shelf. But it's a very complex picture we're getting, actually, and this paper is just an insight.
How has the speciation process in the Weddell and Scotia Seas differed from comparable regions of the ocean?
The deep Southern Ocean is unique in being a stable system regarding the environmental conditions the fauna lives in. The organisms living there are highly adapted to living in these conditions. It is clear that these organisms have their origins in warmer waters, but they have been challenged by strong environmental stresses such as the advance and retreat of the shelf, which occurs during glacial-interglacial cycles. This means that these organisms have been pushed by the ice towards the bottom of the sea, so only species that are able to cope with great barometric variation would be able to survive. This is a very important driver for Antarctic species, and was actually corroborated by ANDEEP data. Another characteristic of the Southern Ocean is the fact that the continental slope surrounding Antarctica is much deeper than the continental slope in other ocean systems around other continents, allowing easier exchange between the shelf and the deep-sea. These are two examples of the main speciation drivers in this region.
How does the deep ocean ecosystem in the Weddell and Scotia Sea compare with other deep ocean ecosystems elsewhere in the world?
Scientific interest in the deep-sea ocean ecosystems has really started in the last three decades. Little is known about the deep-sea assemblages of the Southern Ocean. This ecosystem is relatively new compared to other deep ocean ecosystems elsewhere on the planet. For example, the western side of the Weddell Sea was formed during the opening of the Drake Passage and tectonic movements in the Scotia Sea. From an oceanographic point of view, an important driver is the presence of the cold Weddell Sea bottom water, which is the main water mass above the organisms living on the floor of the Weddell Sea. Deeper analyses of the results will bring elements to address the comparison between deep Southern Ocean and other deep oceans.
Have there been any other research expeditions taking samples of other areas of the earth's oceans at similar depths?
To my knowledge, there are a few long-term projects focusing on sites in the deep North Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and moving into process-orientated investigations. There is a dedicated initiative under the Census of Marine Life (COML), the Census of the Diversity of the Abyssal Marine Life (CEDAMAR) which specifically addresses the issues of deep-sea biodiversity, and similar work is going on in other ocean basins around the world, at even greater depths.
How do you go about sharing your findings with the rest of the global scientific community?
The initiative I am coordinating is called SCAR-MarBIN (SCAR-Marine Biodiversity Information Network). SCAR-MarBIN is a core International Polar Year project and acts as the information component of another Census of Marine Life project, the Census of Antarctic Marine Life (CAML). SCAR-MarBIN is a collaborative, voluntary and federating project, initiated under the aegis of SCAR, and mainly funded by the Belgian Science Policy (BELSPO). The idea is to allow for open and free access to the taxonomic and biogeographic data, meaning users are able to consult Antarctic marine biodiversity information with a simple click of the mouse at a single access point on the web.
Users are free to search, browse and visualise the data, and can even download it in a variety of formats. SCAR-MarBIN has developed a centralised Register of Antarctic Marine Species (RAMS), which holds information on almost 7,000 species, and is constantly updated by a board of specialists. We also invest a lot of effort in following the international standards for data and metadata exchange, so we are able to share with wider biodiversity initiatives such as the OBIS (Ocean Biogeographic Information System) and the GBIF (Global Biodiversity Information Facility). The SCAR-MarBIN web portal has gathered more than 100,000 visitors since its creation and gives access to more than 500,000 distribution records from almost 50 distributed databases.
By: Joseph Cheek


