Skip to main content
Log in

Basal foraminifera and gromiids (Protista) at the Håkon-Mosby Mud Volcano (Barents Sea slope)

  • Original Paper
  • Published:
Marine Biodiversity Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

We describe the occurrence of basal (‘primitive’) foraminifera and gromiids (a distinct taxon related to the foraminifera) in different bathyal habitats of the Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano (HMMV, Barents Sea). The foraminifera include two distinct groupings: (1) soft-shelled monothalamous foraminifera (‘allogromiids’, ‘saccamminids’ and ‘psammosphaerids’) and (2) brown organic-walled foraminifera (genera Conicotheca, Nodellum, Placopsilinella and Resigella). Samples were analysed from (1) the ‘hot centre’ of the volcano where fluid upflow was maximal; (2) smooth and structured muds in a ‘warm’ area of the centre where fluid upflow was reduced; (3) areas covered by Beggiatoa mats; (4) an area colonised by siboglinid polychaetes (‘pogonophores’); and (5) areas of ‘normal’ seafloor outside the volcano. Together, the studied organisms represented 57.8 % (‘normal’ seafloor; n = 418), 28.5 % (‘warm centre’; n = 122), and 26.4 % (Beggiatoa mats; n = 5) of all ‘live’ (stained) foraminifera in three samples (0–1 cm layer) that were sorted for all stained foraminifera. In total, the 17 samples examined yielded 21 ‘allogromiid’ (organic-walled), 25 ‘saccamminid’ (agglutinated) and 5 other morphospecies among the monothalamous foraminifera, as well as 5 ‘brown-walled’ and 5 gromiid morphospecies. Four taxa were identified to species (Conicotheca nigrans, Resigella moniliforme, R. polaris, Micrometula hyalinosphaera); another seven were assigned to the genera Bathyallogromia, Conqueria, Nodellum, Placopsilinella, Resigella, Tinogullmia and Vanhoeffenella. All others were undescibed at the genus level. Some species, notably ‘Saccamminid sp. 5’, C. nigrans and Nodellum sp., were distributed in sediment layers down to 5 cm depth, and sausage-shaped gromiids were also present in the deeper layers of some samples. The number of basal foraminiferal and gromiid morphospecies varied considerably from site to site. It was relatively high north of the volcano (42 morphospecies in 4 samples) and in the ‘warm centre’ (28 morphospecies in 2 samples), somewhat lower southwest of the volcano (at least 13 morphospecies in 2 samples) and in the siboglinid field (14 morphospecies in three samples), and substantially reduced in the bacterial mat area (5 morphospecies in 6 samples). The scarcity of these protists at the bacterial mat sites is probably a consequence of high sulfide concentrations. No stained foraminifera or gromiids were observed at the ‘hot centre’ site. In general, assemblages from within and around the HMMV resembled those reported from other bathyal sites, notably in the Porcupine Seabight. Saccamminid sp. 5, by far the most common species in our samples, belongs to a ‘lamp-like’ morphotype that is widely distributed in the oceans. The wall structure, and the presence of what appears to be an internal partition across the base of the neck, is reminiscent of some komokiaceans.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Fig. 1
Fig. 2
Fig. 3
Fig. 4
Fig. 5
Fig. 6
Fig. 7
Fig. 8
Fig. 9
Fig. 10
Fig. 11
Fig. 12
Fig. 13
Fig. 14
Fig. 15

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Barnett PRO, Watson J, Connelly D (1984) A multiple corer for taking virtually undisturbed samples from shelf, bathyal and abyssal sediments. Oceanol Acta 7:401–408

    Google Scholar 

  • Bernhard JM, Habura A, Bowser SS (2006) An endobiont-bearing allogromiid from the Santa Barbara Basin: implications for the early diversification of foraminifera. J Geophys Res 111: G03002. doi:10.1029/2005JG000158

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Bowser SS, Gooday AJ, Alexander SP, Bernhard JM (1995) Larger agglutinated foraminifera from McMurdo Sound, Antarctica: are Astrammina rara and Notodendrodes antarctikos allogromiids incognito? Mar Micropaleontol 26:75–88

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Cornelius N, Gooday AJ (2004) ‘Live’ (stained) deep-sea benthic foraminifera in the western Weddell Sea: trends in abundance, diversity and taxonomic composition in relation to water depth. Deep-Sea Res II 51:1571–1602

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Danovaro R, Gambi C, Della Croce N (2002) Meiofauna hotspot in the Atacama Trench, eastern South Pacific Ocean. Deep-Sea Res 1(49):843–857

    Google Scholar 

  • De Beer D, Sauter E, Niemann H, Kaul N, Foucher J-P, Witte U, Schlüter M, Boetius A (2006) In situ fluxes and zonation of microbial activity in surface sediments of the Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano. Limnol Oceanogr 51:1315–1331

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Decker C, Morineaux M, Van Gaever S, Caprais J-C, Lichtschlag A, Gauthier O, Andersen AC, Olu K (2012) Habitat heterogeneity influences cold-seep macrofaunal communities within and among seeps along the Norwegian margin. Part 1: macrofaunal community structure. Mar Ecol 33:231–245

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Enge AJ, Kucera M, Heinz P (2012) Diversity and microhabitats of living benthic foraminifera in the abyssal Northeast Pacific. Mar Micropaleontol 96–97:84–104

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Erbacher J, Nelskamp S (2006) Comparison of benthic foraminifera inside and outside a sulphur-oxidizing bacterial mat from the present oxygen-minimum zone off Pakistan. Deep-Sea Res I 53:751–775

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Felden J, Wenzhöfer F, Feseker T, Boetius A (2010) Transport and consumption of oxygen and methane in different habitats of the the Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano (HMMV). Limnol Oceanogr 55:2366–2380

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Finlay BJ, Esteban GF, Fenchel T (2004) Protist diversity is different? Protist 155:15–22

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Foucher JP, Westbrook G, Boetius A, Ceramicola S, Dupre S, Mascle A, Mienert J, Pfannkuche O, Pierre C, Praeg D (2009) Structure and drivers of cold-seep ecosystems. Oceanogr 22:92–109

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gebruk AV, Krylova EM, Lein AY, Vinogradov GM, Anderson A, Pimenov AN, Cherkashev GA, Crane K (2003) Methane seep community of the Håkon Mosby mud volcano (the Norwegian Sea): composition and trophic aspects. Sarsia 88:394–403

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gooday AJ (1986a) Soft-shelled foraminifera in meiofaunal samples from the bathyal northeast Atlantic. Sarsia 71:275–287

    Google Scholar 

  • Gooday AJ (1986b) Meiofaunal foraminiferans from the bathyal Porcupine Seabight (northeast Atlantic): size structure, standing stock, taxonomic composition, species diversity and vertical distribution in the sediment. Deep-Sea Res 33:1345–1373

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gooday AJ, Shires R, Jones AR (1997) Large deep-sea agglutinated foraminifera; two differing kinds of organization and their possible ecological significance. J Foraminifer Res 27:278–291

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gooday AJ, Hori S, Todo Y, Okamoto T, Kitazato H, Sabbatini A (2004) Soft-walled, monothalamous benthic foraminiferans in the Pacific, Indian and Atlantic Oceans: aspects of biodiversity and biogeography. Deep-Sea Res I 51:33–53

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gooday AJ, Bowser SS, Cedhagen T, Cornelius N, Hald M, Korsun S, Pawlowski J (2005) Monothalamous foraminiferans and gromiids (Protista) from western Svalbard: a preliminary survey. Mar Biol Res 1:290–310

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gooday AJ, Kamenskaya OE, Cedhagen T (2007) New and little-known Komokiacea (Foraminifera) from the bathyal and abyssal Weddell Sea and adjacent areas. Zool J Linn Soc 151:219–251

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gooday AJ, Kamenskaya OE, Kitazato H (2008a) The enigmatic deep-sea, organic-walled foraminiferal genera Chitinosiphon, Nodellum and Resigella (Protista): a taxonomic re-evaluation. Syst Biodivers 6:385–404

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gooday AJ, Todo Y, Uematsu K, Kitazato H (2008b) New organic-walled Foraminifera (Protista) from the ocean’s deepest point, the Challenger Deep (western Pacific Ocean). Zool J Linn Soc 153:399–423

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gooday AJ, Kamenskaya OE, Soltwedel T (2010) The organic-walled genera Resigella and Conicotheca (Protista, Foraminifera) at two Arctic deep-sea sites (North Pole and Barents Sea), including the description of a new species of Resigella. Mar Biodivers 40:33–44

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Gooday AJ, Rothe N, Pearce RB (2013) New and poorly known benthic foraminifera (Protista, Rhizaria) inhabiting the shells of planktonic foraminifera on the bathyal Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Mar Biol Res (in press)

  • Goldstein ST, Richardson EA (2002) Comparison of test and cell body ultrastructure in three modern allogromiid foraminifera: application of high pressure freezing and freeze substitution. J Foraminifer Res 32:375–383

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Habura A, Goldstein ST, Broderick S, Bowser SS (2008) A bush, not a tree: the extraordinary diversity of cold-water basal foraminiferans extends to warm-water environments. Limnol Oceanogr 53:1339–1351

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Hedley RH (1962) The significance of “an inner chitinous lining” in saccamminid organisation, with special reference to a new species of Saccammina (Foraminifera) from New Zealand. NZ J Sci 5:375–389

    Google Scholar 

  • Hedley RH, Ogden CG, Wakefield J, St J (1972) Shell ultrastructure in allogromiid Foraminifera. Bull Br Mus Nat Hist 24:467–474

    Google Scholar 

  • Jerosch K, Schlüter M, Foucher J-P, Allais A-G, Klages M, Edy C (2007) Spatial distribution of mud flows, chemautotrophic communities, and biogeochemical habitats at Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano. Mar Geol 243:1–17

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Klages M (2010) The expedition of the research vessel “Polarstern” to the arctic in 2009 (ARK-XXIV/2). Ber Polar- Meeresforsch 607:1–80

    Google Scholar 

  • Lemke P (2003) The expedition ARKTIS XVIII/1a, b of the research vessel ‘Polarstern’ in 2002. Ber Polar- Meeresforsch 446:1–119

    Google Scholar 

  • Lichtschlag A, Felden J, Brüchert V, Boetius A, de Beer D (2010) Geochemical processes and chemosynthetic primary production in different thiotrophic mats of the Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano (Barents Sea). Limnol Oceanogr 55:931–949

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Lobegeier MK, Sen Gupta BK (2008) Foraminifera of hydrocarbon seeps, Gulf of Mexico. J Foraminifer Res 38:93–116

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Mackensen A, Wollenburg J, Licari L (2006) Low d13C in tests of live epibenthic and endobenthic foraminifera at a site of active methane seepage. Paleoceanography 21:PA2022. doi:10.1029/2005PA001196

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Majewski W, Pawlowski J, Zajaczkowski M (2005) Monothalamous foraminifera from West Spitsbergen fjords, Svalbard: a brief overview. Pol Polar Res 26:269–285

    Google Scholar 

  • Mikhalevich VI (2004) On the heterogeneity of the former Textulariina (Foraminifera). In: Bubik M, Kaminski MA (Eds) Proceedings of the Sixth International Workshop on Agglutinated Foraminifera. Grzybowski Found Spec Publ 8: 317– 349

  • Mikhalevich VI (2005) Polymerization and oligomerization in foraminiferal evolution. Stud Geol Pol 124:117–141

    Google Scholar 

  • Morigi C, Sabbatini A, Vitale G, Pancotti I, Gooday AJ, Duineveld GCA, De Stigter HC, Danovaro R, Negri A (2012) Foraminiferal biodiversity associated with cold-water coral carbonate mounds and open slope of SE Rockall Bank (Irish continental margin - NE Atlantic). Deep-Sea Res I 59:54–71

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Nardelli MP (2010) Response of benthic foraminifera to pollution through experimental and in situ studies: advances in biological aspects and tools for future application in biomonitoring. Doctoral thesis, Università Politecnica delle Marche

  • Niemann H, Lösekann T, de Beer D, Elvert M, Nadalig T, Knittel K, Amann R, Sauter EJ, Schlüter M, Klages M, Foucher JP, Boetius A (2006) Novel microbial communities of the Haakon Mosby mud volcano and their role as a methane sink. Nature 443:854–858

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Pancotti I (2010) Variazioni longitudinali, batimetriche e biogeografiche di abbondanza, biomassa e diversità della meiofauna a foraminiferi bentonici nel Mediterraneo profondo e Atlantico. PhD thesis, Università Politecnica delle Marche

  • Panieri G (2006) The effect of shallow marine hydrothermal vent activity on benthic foraminifera (Aeolian Arc, Tyrrhenian Sea). J Foraminifer Res 36:3–14

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Portnova D, Mokievsky V, Soltwedel T (2010) Nematode species distribution patterns at the Håkon Mosby mud volcano (Norwegian Sea). Mar Ecol 32:24–41

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Resig JM (1981) Biogeography of benthic foraminifera of the northern Nazca Plate and adjacent continental margin. In: Kulm LD, Dymond J, Dasch EJ, Hussong DM, Roderick R (Eds) Nazca plate: crustal formation and the Andean convergence. Geol Soc Am Mem 154:619–665

    Google Scholar 

  • Rothe N, Gooday AJ, Cedhagen T, Fahrni J, Hughes JA, Page A, Pearce RA, Pawlowski J (2009) Three new species of deep-sea Gromia (Protista, Rhizaria) from the bathyal and abyssal Weddell Sea, Antarctica. Zool J Linn Soc 157:451–469

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Rothe N, Gooday AJ, Cedhagen T, Hughes JA (2010) Biodiversity and distribution of the genus Gromia (Protista, Rhizaria) in the deep Weddell Sea (Southern Ocean). Polar Biol 43:69–81

    Google Scholar 

  • Sabbatini A, Morigi C, Negri A, Gooday AJ (2002) Soft-shelled foraminifera from a hadal site (7800m water depth) in the Atacama Trench (SE Pacific): preliminary observations. J Micropalaeontol 21:131–135

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Schewe I (2001) Small-sized benthic organisms of the Alpha Ridge, Central Arctic Ocean. Int Rev Hydrobiol 86:317–335

    Article  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Schewe I, Soltwedel T (2003) Benthic response to ice-edge-induced particle flux in the Arctic Ocean. Polar Biol 26:610–620

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Soltwedel T, Portnova D, Kolar I, Mokievsky V, Schewe I (2005) The small-sized benthic biota of the Hakon Mosby Mud Volcano (SW Barents Sea slope). J Mar Syst 55:271–290

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Tendal OS, Hessler RR (1977) An introduction to the biology, and systematics of the Komokiacea (Textulariina, Foraminiferida). Galathea Rep 14:165–194

    Google Scholar 

  • Todo Y, Kitazato H, Hashimoto J, Gooday AJ (2005) Simple foraminifera flourish at the ocean’s deepest point. Science 307:689

    Article  PubMed  CAS  Google Scholar 

  • Van Gaever S, Moodley L, de Beer D, Vanreusel A (2006) Meiobenthos at the Arctic Håkon Mosby Mud Volcano, with a parental-caring nematode thriving in sulphide-rich sediments. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 321:143–155

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Van Gaever S, Olu K, Derycke S, Vanreusel A (2009) Metazoan meiofaunal communities at cold seeps along the Norwegian margin: influence of habitat heterogeneity and evidence for connection with shallow-water habitats. Deep-Sea Res I 56:772–785

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Wollenburg JE, Mackensen A (1998) Living benthic foraminifers from the central Arctic Ocean: faunal composition, standing stock and diversity. Mar Micropaleontol 34:153–185

    Article  Google Scholar 

  • Wollenburg JE, Mackensen A (2009) The ecology and distribution of benthic foraminifera at the Håkon Mosby mud volcano (SW Barents Sea slope). Deep-Sea Res 56:1136–1370

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgments

We thank two anonymous reviewers for their comments that helped to improve the manuscript. This paper is a contribution to the EU Framework 6 Integrated Project HERMES and the Framework 7 Collaborative Project HERMIONE. A.J.G. and O.E.K. were partly funded by HERMES and HERMIONE grants; O.E.K. received additional support from Minobrnauki of Russian Federation, Project 8664.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Andrew J. Gooday.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Gooday, A.J., Kamenskaya, O.E. & Soltwedel, T. Basal foraminifera and gromiids (Protista) at the Håkon-Mosby Mud Volcano (Barents Sea slope). Mar Biodiv 43, 205–225 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12526-013-0148-5

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Revised:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12526-013-0148-5

Keywords

Navigation