2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1439-0485.2006.00149.x
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Sunken wood from the Vanuatu Islands: identification of wood substrates and preliminary description of associated fauna

Abstract: Two trawl samples of natural sunken wood collected near Vanuatu were identified based on histological studies. Detailed descriptions were made and microphotographs of the cell types were taken, using the three classical sections (cross, tangential and radial). The botanical characters were compared first to the native flora of Vanuatu, then also to the introduced species. The possibility of transportation by ocean currents with a mainly southern and eastern direction is discussed. The first sample lacks appare… Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(47 citation statements)
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References 15 publications
(20 reference statements)
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“…In addition, over these time periods a diversity of successional stages occurs from scavenger, to specialist fauna and finally with the bones acting as hard substrate for filter feeders. Wood and leaf deposits create an additional type of similar habitat on shelf, fjord, slope, and abyssal habitats near wooded continental margins (Wolff, 1979;Pailleret et al, 2007). These terrigenous deposits create both an additional type of carbon sequestration, while providing high levels of primary and secondary production to the deep-sea floor (Turner, 1977;Bernardino et al, 2010) and its associated supporting, regulating, and provisioning services.…”
Section: In Situ Primary and Secondary Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, over these time periods a diversity of successional stages occurs from scavenger, to specialist fauna and finally with the bones acting as hard substrate for filter feeders. Wood and leaf deposits create an additional type of similar habitat on shelf, fjord, slope, and abyssal habitats near wooded continental margins (Wolff, 1979;Pailleret et al, 2007). These terrigenous deposits create both an additional type of carbon sequestration, while providing high levels of primary and secondary production to the deep-sea floor (Turner, 1977;Bernardino et al, 2010) and its associated supporting, regulating, and provisioning services.…”
Section: In Situ Primary and Secondary Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The group has received a careful attention since the 1980s in the description of the animal communities (e.g. Marshall 1985Marshall , 1988Kiel and Goedert 2006a, b;Pailleret et al 2006), as well as in the study of the impressive taxonomic diversity of mussels (Samadi et al 2007;Lorion et al 2009). Moreover, the phylogenetic relationships among wood-, bone-, vent-, and seep-associated mussels led to propose the "stepping stones" hypothesis for the colonization of the deep-sea reducing environments (see Smith et al 1989;Distel et al 2000).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The thyasirids were not unique to the traps but were known from the surrounding sediments (Gaudron et al 2010). Small thyasirids, associated with woodfalls, are also reported by Bernardino et al (2010) but not by Pailleret et al (2007) or by Bienhold et al (2013). Deep-sea settings influenced by macrovegetation input have been studied, including the Puerto Rico and Cayman trenches in the Caribbean, but hereto thyasirids have not been reported (Wolff 1979).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%