Abstract

AbstractRose Bengal stained benthic foraminifera which pass through a 63 μm mesh (microforaminifera and nanoforaminifera) have been extracted by handsorting the fine sieve residues (> 45 μm, 31 μm, 28 μm, 20 μm, 15 μm) of abyssal sediment samples. The samples were collected using a multiple corer in four areas of the northeast Atlantic between 31° N and 59° N. The abundance of these minute foraminifera varied from 2 specimens per 1 cm2 (Madeira Abyssal Plain) to > 110 per 1 cm2 (BIOTRANS area). They include a variety of taxa, the most common being certain rotaliid species, hormosinaceans and other multilocular agglutinated forms, the unilocular agglutinated genus Lagenammina, soft‐bodied agglutinated sphaeres and flasks (saccamminids and psammosphaerids) and allogromiids. Some specimens are < 63 μm in maximum dimension but others belonging to elongate taxa are longer.Two samples taken 10 cm apart on the Porcupine Abyssal Plain suggest that minute foraminifera may be patchily distributed on a small scale. One sample, which was overlain by substantial amounts of phytodetritus, contained > 100 stained specimens (> 30 per 1 cm2) while the other, in which much less phytodetritus was present, yielded only 10 specimens (2.9 per 1 cm2). This observation suggests that some micro‐ and nanoforaminifera may flourish in the presence of decaying organic matter, perhaps consuming the associated bacteria. The presence of phytodetritus may also explain why two of our samples from the Madeira Abyssal Plain (MAP) contained an order of magnitude more stained tiny foraminifera than two other MAP samples in which phytodetritus was absent.

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