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In community ecology, niche analysis is a classic tool for investigating species' distribution and dynamics. Components of a species' niche include biotic and abiotic factors.In the hydrothermal vent ecosystem, although composition and temporal variation have been investigated since these deep-sea habitats were discovered nearly 40 years ago, the roles and the factors behind the success of the dominant species of these ecosystems have yet to be fully elucidated. In the Lucky Strike vent field on the Mid Atlantic Ridge (MAR), the dominant species is the mussel Bathymodiolus azoricus. Data on this species and its associated community were collected during four oceanographic cruises on the Eiffel Tower edifice and integrated in a novel statistical framework for niche analysis. We assessed the thermal range, density, biomass and niche similarities of B. azoricus and its associated fauna.Habitat similarities grouped mussels into three size categories: mussels with lengths ranging from 0.5 to 1.5 cm, from 1.5 to 6 cm, and mussels longer than 6 cm. These size categories were consistent with those found in previous studies based on video imagery. The three size categories featured different associated fauna. The thermal range of mussels was shown to change with organism size, with intermediate sizes having a broader thermal niche than small or large mussels. Temperature maxima seem to drive their distribution along the mixing gradient between warm hydrothermal fluids and cold seawater. B. azoricus constitutes nearly 90% of the biomass (in g dry weight /m²) of the ecosystem. Mean individual weights were calculated for 39 of the 79 known taxa on Eiffel Tower and thermal ranges were obtained for all the inventoried species of this edifice. The analysis showed that temperature is a suitable variable to describe density variations among samples for 71 taxa. However, thermal conditions do not suffice to explain biomass variability. Our results provide valuable insight into mussel ecology, biotic interactions and the role of B. azoricus in the community.
King scallop contamination (Pecten maximus) by domoic acid, a neurotoxin produced by some species of the diatom Pseudo-nitzschia, is highly problematic because of its lengthy retention in the bivalve tissue, leading to prolonged fishery closures. Data collected within the French Phytoplankton and Phycotoxin monitoring network (REPHY) over the 1995-2012 period were used to characterize the seasonal dynamics and the interannual variability of P.-nitzschia spp. blooms as well as the contamination of king scallop fishing grounds, in six contrasted bays distributed along the French Atlantic coast and English Channel. Monitoring revealed that these toxic events have become more frequent since the year 2000, but with varying magnitudes, frequencies and timing depending on the bay. Two bays, located in southern Brittany, exhibited both recurrent contaminations and high P.-nitzschia abundances. The Brest bay and the Seine bay were intermittently affected. The Pertuis Breton exhibited only one major toxic event related to an exceptionally intense bloom of P.-nitzschia in 2010, and the Saint Brieuc bay neither showed significant contamination nor high P.-nitzschia abundance. While high P.-nitzschia abundance appeared to be correlated to scallop toxicity, this study highlights the difficulty in linking P.-nitzschia spp. blooms to king scallop contamination through monitoring. Indeed, P.-nitzschia was determined at the genus level and data regarding species abundances and their toxicity levels are an absolute prerequisite to further assess the environmental control of ASP events. As results describe distinct P.-nitzschia bloom dynamics along the French coast, this may suggest distinct controlling factors. They also revealed that major climatic events, such as the winter storm Xynthia in 2010, can trigger toxicity in P.-nitzschia over a large spatial scale and impact king scallop fisheries all along the coast.
Highlights► High consistency in species composition across different edifices at the field scale -Lucky Strike. ► Various chemistry domains may influence local abiotic conditions and diversity patterns. ► A "vent field signature" is observed across the three studied fields. ► Distinct abundance and diversity patterns are observed, Menez Gwen being the most different. ► Exogenous factors better explain the dissimilarities in faunal community structure. ► Of particular interest are the current patterns between the three vent fields.
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