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Non-viable seasonal settlement of larvae of the upper bathyal brittle star Ophiocten gracilis in the Rockall Trough abyssal

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Abstract

Re-examination of ine structure of postlarvae previously identified as the abyssal species Ophiura ljungmani (Lyman) in a time series of samples taken from 1975 to 1980 from a 2900 m deep permanent station in the southern Rockall Trough (Northeast Atlantic Ocean) has shown the majority of the large summertime peak of brittle-star postlarvae to belong to a second species. Most were incomplete and probably corpses when collected. The few intact specimens present were identical to postlarvae collected in benthic samples from the neighbouring continental slope, where a dense population of the bathyal species Ophiocten gracilis (G. O. Sars) is present from 600 to 1 200 m depth. Examination of population size-structures indicates synchronous reproduction in January/February and annual recruitment to the population. The presence both of “Ophiopluteus ramosus” and intact postlarvae of Ophiocten gracilis in midwater plankton samples from the vicinity of the permanent station in March/April are thought to derive either from the adjacent slope population or, less probably, from larvae transported in the North Atlantic Current from the Flemish Cap area off Newfoundland. In deep water, viability of these benthic postlarvae is low, none surviving longer than the following winter in the Rockall Trough. These observations suggest a large seasonal transfer from the slope of non-viable larvae and postlarvae as food to the abyssal benthic community.

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Communicated by J. Mauchline, Oban

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Gage, J.D., Tyler, P.A. Non-viable seasonal settlement of larvae of the upper bathyal brittle star Ophiocten gracilis in the Rockall Trough abyssal. Mar. Biol. 64, 153–161 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00397104

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