Abstract

Abstract Carbon‐flow pathways are proposed for the muddy‐shelf benthos off the coast of West‐land and north‐west Nelson, New Zealand (southeastern Tasman Sea). They are largely from bio‐mass estimates of sediment bacteria (adenosine triphosphate assay), meiofauna, macrofauna, and demersal fish, and literature values of production/ biomass ratios and energy transfer efficiencies. It is assumed that benthic secondary production (deposit‐feeder dominated) is mediated largely by microbial production, estimated for the upper 2 cm of sediment, as 39 gC m‐2 y‐1. About half this production may be required by benthic invertebrates: meiofaunal production, provisionally estimated as 3.6 gC m‐2 y‐1 consuming 12 gC m‐2 y‐1 and macrofaunal production, at 1.8 gC m‐2y‐1 using 6 gC m‐2y‐1. Bottom‐feeding fish, with a production of at least 0.05 gC m‐2 y‐1 are estimated to consume 0.5 gC m‐2 y‐1. The dominant source of energy for the benthos is pelagic primary production, estimated to average 182 gC m‐2 y‐1 on the shelf, a...

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call