Abstract

In the Arctic, climate-driven alterations to the quality and quantity of organic matter reaching the seafloor will likely affect benthic food web function. We used biomass-weighted diversity measures based on trophic traits (those related to feeding behaviours, e.g., mobility, size, food source), stable isotope ratios (δ15N and δ13C), and taxonomy to assess linkages between benthic food web structure and indicators of food supply in the shelf and slope ecosystems of the Canadian Beaufort Sea and Amundsen Gulf (down to 500 m). Benthic communities across both regions used a similar diversity of sedimentary organic matter sources according to stable isotopes, despite known differences between regions in organic matter input and benthic–pelagic coupling. Shelf-edge and upper-slope communities exhibited relatively high trophic trait diversity, which likely reflected the exploitation of pulsed food inputs associated with dynamic processes at the shelf break that affect the production and advection of organic matter to the benthos. Pairwise relationships between trophic traits and sedimentary proxies of benthic food supply were not significant at the regional scale. However, cluster analyses supported the notion that trophic trait composition was influenced by proximity to the shelf edge, where food supply is influenced by episodic events that may not be reflected by in situ sedimentary proxies. Our findings add to growing evidence that evaluating trophic traits composition may provide more information regarding functional responses to changes in benthic food supply than either isotopic or taxonomic diversity indices alone.

Highlights

  • Benthic biodiversity and food web structure strongly influence ecological functioning of marine ecosystems (Snelgrove 1997; Snelgrove et al 2018; Solan et al 2020)

  • Comparisons between traits-based and isotopic trophic diversity provided insight regarding spatial variation in potential and realized trophic structure, but did not reveal the strong differences expected between the Canadian Beaufort Sea and Amundsen Gulf

  • The distribution of trophic traits varied with bottom oceanography in a way that suggested an influence of depth, or possibly of summer ice clearance from the shelf (Yunda-Guarin et al 2020), but did not vary significantly with the proxies for benthic food supply measured in this analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Benthic biodiversity and food web structure strongly influence ecological functioning of marine ecosystems (Snelgrove 1997; Snelgrove et al 2018; Solan et al 2020). Effects on benthic food web functioning are expected to be spatially variable and influenced by factors that determine primary productivity and the availability of labile organic matter at the seafloor (Tremblay et al 2011; Link et al 2013b; Steiner et al 2015; Tedesco et al 2019). Indices of functional diversity and composition have emerged as potentially powerful ecological indicators for marine benthic communities (Beauchard et al 2017) and are influenced by the quality and sources of organic matter available to benthos (e.g., Link et al 2013b;Al-Habahbeh et al 2020; McGovern et al 2020)

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