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Dufour, Suzanne C.; White, Caroline; Desrosiers, Gaston; Juniper, S. Kim. (2008). Structure and composition of the consolidated mud tube of Maldane sarsi (Polychaeta: Maldanidae). Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science. 78(2): 360-368.
410780
10.1016/j.ecss.2007.12.013 [view]
Dufour, Suzanne C.; White, Caroline; Desrosiers, Gaston; Juniper, S. Kim
2008
Structure and composition of the consolidated mud tube of Maldane sarsi (Polychaeta: Maldanidae)
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
78(2): 360-368
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb)
Maldanid polychaetes can be important components of marine benthic communities, playing significant roles in particle subduction or sediment irrigation. Many maldanids are known to inhabit tubes consisting of sediments consolidated by mucus; the structure and composition of these tubes, and their potential impact on benthic environments, are poorly known. We examined the three-dimensional organization of Maldane sarsi tubes, using CT scanning together with analyses of sediment grain size and concentrations of Fe, Mn, organic carbon and bacteria in tube material. M. sarsi tubes consist of stacks of individual consolidated mud disks, surrounding a dense, continuous, inner tube. The tubes of M. sarsi contained fewer fine particles than surrounding sediments, and greater concentrations of Fe, Mn, organic carbon and bacteria, especially in the inner zone. These distributions suggest that tube irrigation affects Fe and Mn oxidation and precipitation in a narrow zone surrounding M. sarsi, and that mucous secretion and potential feeding activities (the hoeing of surface sediments) lead to increases in organic carbon and bacteria in the inner, and deepest parts of the tube. The finding of relict tubes, buried at up to 15 cut depth, indicates a relatively high longevity for these structures and suggests a potential importance in biogeochemical cycling.
North Atlantic
Biology
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2021-07-30 03:02:11Z
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