Abstract

To establish relationships between organic input to the benthos and decreases in benthic population biomass and density, benthic oxygen uptake was measured in an oligotrophic submarine cave in the northwestern Mediterranean Sea (Marseille, France), on seven separate occasions in 1987, using an in situ bell-jar respirometer. Oxygen uptake was measured in both the outer twilight section and the dark inner section of the cave during an annual survey (seven recording periods from February 1987 to November 1988). The mean annual benthic oxygen uptake was 80.9 litres O2 m−2 yr−1 for the twilight outer section and 15.5 litres O2 m−2 yr−1 for the dark inner section. The results are discussed and the biogeochemical budget for particulate organic carbon at the sediment-water interface calculated. Respiration rates (expressed as carbon equivalents), together with previously published data on vertical fluxes and burial of organic carbon, revealed that anaerobic pathways accounted for 14% and aerobic pathways for 86% of the total benthic metabolism in the outer part of the cave. In the inner section of the cave, degradation of organic carbon occurred only through aerobic degradation, indicating a strongly carbon-limited ecosystem. The low respiration rates recorded in the dark section were similar to values recorded for some oligotrophic deep-sea environments (1 000 to 2 000 m). Such budgets are essential preliminary steps in order to accurately model benthic metabolic pathways. The determination of annual fluxes linked to the acquisition of long-term data will yield better knowledge of the recycling processes at the water-sediment interface.

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