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Deep-sea ecosystems of the Indian Ocean

IR@NIO: CSIR-National Institute Of Oceanography, Goa

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Field Value
 
Creator Ingole, B.S.
Koslow, J.A.
 
Date 2006-07-17T10:06:04Z
2006-07-17T10:06:04Z
2005
 
Identifier Indian Journal of Marine Sciences, vol. 34(1), 27-34pp.
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/222
 
Description The deep Indian Ocean is composed of a variety of habitat types, including abyssal plains, oxygenated slopes and basins, seamounts, and trenches. The geomorphological features of the Indian Ocean include mid-ocean ridges, abyssal plains and few deep-sea trenches. Although the Indian Ocean has relatively few seamounts and islands, it contains numerous submarine plateaus and rises. We review what is known of deep-sea benthic habitats studied with modem techniques in the Indian Ocean. Recent biological studies conducted in the Central Indian Ocean Basin (CIOB) suggested remarkably rich and diverse micro-, meio-, macroand megabenthic communities on the abyssal sea floor. The megafauna! assemblage of the CIOB has high biomass but low diversity. While macrofaunal biomass decreased away from the shore, the meiofaunal biomass increased with distance. The discovery of 'Kairei' and Edmond hydrothermal field near the Rodriguez Triple Junction suggests that mid-ocean ridge systems in the Indian Ocean are potential sites for hydrothermal mineralization and contain active vent fields. There are no available estimates for the numbers of seamounts in the Indian Ocean based on echo sounder recordings. Satellite altimetry data indicate that the Indian Ocean has an intermediate number of generally small to moderate-sized seamounts, mostly associated with its ridge systems. The fauna of Indian Ocean seamounts remains virtually unexplored.
 
Format 105792 bytes
application/pdf
 
Language en
 
Publisher NISCAIR, CSIR
 
Subject Benthic ecosystems
Indian Ocean
 
Title Deep-sea ecosystems of the Indian Ocean
 
Type Article