Abyssal hills are the most abundant landform on Earth, yet the ecological impact of the resulting habitat heterogeneity on the wider abyss is largely unexplored. Topographic features are known to influence food availability and the sedimentary environment in other deep-sea habitats, in turn affecting the species assemblage and biomass. To assess this spatial variation, benthic assemblages and environmental conditions were compared at four hill and four plain sites at the Porcupine Abyssal Plain. Here we show that differences in megabenthic communities on abyssal hills and the adjacent plain are related to environmental conditions, which may be caused by local topography and hydrodynamics. Although these hills may receive similar particulate...
Large-scale photographic surveys present an opportunity to quantify variation in benthic megafaunal ...
Abstract The abyssal plain covers more than half the Earth's surface. The main food source to abyssa...
Megafaunal seafloor assemblages on the Monterey Fan in the NE Pacific (Station M, 4000 m depth) were...
Abyssal hills are the most abundant landform on Earth, yet the ecological impact of the resulting ha...
AbstractAbyssal hills are the most abundant landform on Earth, yet the ecological impact of the resu...
Abyssal plains, often thought of as vast flat areas, encompass a variety of terrains including abyss...
AbstractAbyssal plains, often thought of as vast flat areas, encompass a variety of terrains includi...
Sinking particulate organic matter (POM, phytodetritus) is the principal limiting resource for deep-...
Bathymetric gradients in the deep sea are known to affect key benthic community characteristics such...
Inputs of detritus from the surface ocean are an important driver of community dynamics in the deep ...
Habitat heterogeneity and species diversity are often linked. On the deep seafloor, sediment variabi...
Determining the distribution and abundance of life is challenging, especially in the deep sea where ...
Abyssal hills, small topographic features rising above the abyssal seafloor (< 1000 m altitude), hav...
Highlights • Seafloor geomorphology was important in the structuring of abyssal megafauna. • ...
The distribution of organisms is related to both environmental factors and interactions between orga...
Large-scale photographic surveys present an opportunity to quantify variation in benthic megafaunal ...
Abstract The abyssal plain covers more than half the Earth's surface. The main food source to abyssa...
Megafaunal seafloor assemblages on the Monterey Fan in the NE Pacific (Station M, 4000 m depth) were...
Abyssal hills are the most abundant landform on Earth, yet the ecological impact of the resulting ha...
AbstractAbyssal hills are the most abundant landform on Earth, yet the ecological impact of the resu...
Abyssal plains, often thought of as vast flat areas, encompass a variety of terrains including abyss...
AbstractAbyssal plains, often thought of as vast flat areas, encompass a variety of terrains includi...
Sinking particulate organic matter (POM, phytodetritus) is the principal limiting resource for deep-...
Bathymetric gradients in the deep sea are known to affect key benthic community characteristics such...
Inputs of detritus from the surface ocean are an important driver of community dynamics in the deep ...
Habitat heterogeneity and species diversity are often linked. On the deep seafloor, sediment variabi...
Determining the distribution and abundance of life is challenging, especially in the deep sea where ...
Abyssal hills, small topographic features rising above the abyssal seafloor (< 1000 m altitude), hav...
Highlights • Seafloor geomorphology was important in the structuring of abyssal megafauna. • ...
The distribution of organisms is related to both environmental factors and interactions between orga...
Large-scale photographic surveys present an opportunity to quantify variation in benthic megafaunal ...
Abstract The abyssal plain covers more than half the Earth's surface. The main food source to abyssa...
Megafaunal seafloor assemblages on the Monterey Fan in the NE Pacific (Station M, 4000 m depth) were...