The primary emphasis of our research is an ongoing time-series project that has been conducted for more than 30 years years (from 1989 to the present) at “Station M” (34° 50’N, 123° 00’W; 4000 meters depth) 220 km west of the central California coast.

The Station M study represents one of the most detailed investigations of any abyssal area in the world ocean. Over this 33-year time series study, we have continuously monitored the amount of sinking particulate matter through the benthic boundary layer (bottom 600 m of the water column and seafloor). Sinking organic matter is the only source of food to seafloor communities at Station M. We use time-lapse photography to record the dynamic responses of animals there to changes in food availability (see video). The Benthic Rover measures how much oxygen is consumed by microbes and animals living in the seafloor sediments. By measuring how much food makes it to the seafloor, and how much is consumed there, we estimate how much carbon is being sequestered in the deep sea over time. Rising atmospheric and surface ocean temperatures are projected to cause a global decrease in sinking organic matter from the upper water column to the seafloor. Such changes would alter benthic community biomass, composition and functioning. Data from the Station M abyssal time series are being used to model carbon flow to predict how changes in atmospheric and sea surface temperatures will affect deep-sea benthic communities and the oceanic carbon cycle.

The seafloor at Station M is characterized by silty-clay sediments with little topographic relief (< 100m over 1600 km2). Surface waters of the California Current over this site generally have high primary production by phytoplankton in the spring and summer, although this varies year to year. This temporal signal in surface production is observed throughout the water column and into the sediments. Measurements at Station M are made with a variety of instruments. Sinking particulate matter, consisting of phytoplankton detritus, zooplankton fecal material and amorphous flocculent material, is collected with sequencing sediment traps moored at 50 and 600 m above bottom. Current flow is measured with current meters on the Rover and on the camera tripod. The activities of mobile animals just above the seafloor (e.g. grenadier fishes, jellyfish and sea cucumbers) and on the sediment (e.g. brittle stars, sea cucumbers, sea urchins) are observed using a time-lapse camera tripod. Video transects of the seafloor are taken by the remotely operated vehicle Doc Ricketts. Oxygen consumption, a measure of biological activity, of organisms living in the sediments on the seafloor is measured by the Benthic Rover.  The Benthic Rover works robotically on the seafloor for nearly a year a a time, taking measurements and photographs as it moves along the seafloor.

Significant findings of these studies at Station M

  • Sinking particulate organic carbon fluxes to abyssal depths and through the benthic boundary layer showed seasonal peaks in summer and fall with considerable inter-annual variability.
  • Sinking particulate organic matter fluxes at 600 m above bottom were correlated with the Bakun upwelling index, revealing a time lag of approximately 2 to 3 months between these climatically mediated events at the surface and the particulate fluxes (food supply) at 3500 m depth.
  • A strong correlation exists between surface ocean processes and the supply of particulate organic matter to the abyssal seafloor at Sta. M.
  • Epibenthic megafauna on the seafloor, including holothurians and echinoids, are very conspicuous in time-lapse camera and camera sled transects. Dramatic shifts in population abundances of the dominant epibenthic species are significantly correlated to El Nino/La Nina events expressed in the Northern Oscillation index when lagged by 14 to 18 months.
  • Epibenthic megafauna and smaller macrofauna abundances are correlated to the particulate organic carbon (food supply) entering the benthic boundary layer when examined over periods of time exceeding a decade.
  • Sediment community oxygen consumption, a measure of food utilization by the benthic community, was highest in summer and lowest in winter.
  • Over an extended time series, the estimate of food utilization by the benthic community exceeded the supply of food. Recent large seasonal pulses of food to the seafloor, beginning in 2012 and continuing through at least 2014, might provide enough food surplus for another 20 years of undersupply at Station M.
  • Fluctuations in food supply driven by climate variation are ultimately linked to abyssal community structure and processes.

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