Abstract

The New Zealand International Polar Year–Census of Antarctic Marine Life (NZ IPY-CAML) project added to previous benthic studies in the Ross Sea by extending sampling north from the continental shelf to previously unsampled areas of the shelf break, slope, abyssal plain and seamounts in the region. The aim of the current study is to give first insights into the deep-sea community structure of the Ross Sea focussing on a component of the benthic boundary layer that is macrofaunal crustaceans collected one metre above the seafloor. We assess changes in Ross Sea crustacean community composition from the shelf break (474 m) to the abyss (3,490 m) and compare the Ross Sea crustacean fauna to areas elsewhere in the Southern Ocean. Analyses reveal high relative abundances, suggesting an important role in the food web. Among the peracarid crustaceans, there was a decline in the proportion of amphipods with increasing depth. Three of 15 isopod families (Acanthaspidiidae, Nannoniscidae and Desmosomatidae) were identified to species level and about 72 % of the species were new to science. Isopod diversity in the Ross Sea abyss appears to be comparable to that in the highly speciose Weddell deep sea. Standardised sampling of these crustacean communities allows setting the biodiversity of the Ross Sea into a global context.

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