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Conway, K.W., Krautter, M., Barrie, J.V., Whitney, F.,
Thomson, R. E., Reiswig, H., Lehnert, H., Mungov, G. & Bertram, M. (2005):
Sponge reefs in the Queen Charlotte Basin, Canada: controls on distribution,
growth and development. In: Freiwald, A. & Roberts, J.M. (eds.): Cold-water
Corals and Ecosystems 605-621, 9 figs.; Springer (Berlin Heidelberg).
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Abstract: Sponge reefs in the Queen Charlotte Basin
exist at 165-240 m depth within tidally influenced shelf troughs subject
to near bottom current velocities of 25-50 cm s-1 where nutrient supply
from coastal runoff is augmented by wind-induced upwelling of nutrient
rich water from the adjacent continental slope. Large reef mounds to 21
m in elevation affect tidally driven bottom currents by deflecting water
flows through extensive reef complexes that are up to 300 km2 in area.
Three hexactinellid species construct reefs by building a siliceous skeletal
framework through several framebuilding processes. These sponge reefs
exist in waters with 90 to 150 µM dissolved oxygen, a temperature
range of 5.9 to 7.3°C and salinity of 33.2 to 33.9 ‰. Relatively
high nutrient levels occur at the reef sites, including silica, which
in bottom waters are typically >40 µM and may be up to 80 µM.
A high dissolved silica level is potentially an important control on occurrence
of these and other dense siliceous sponge populations. The sponge reefs
are mainly confined to seafloor areas where exposed iceberg plough marks
are common. Sediment accumulation rates are negligible on the relict,
glacial surface where the reefs grow, and trapping of flocculated suspended
particulate matter by hexactinosidan or framework skeleton hexactinellid
sponges accounts for a large proportion of the reef matrix. Suspended
sediment concentration is reduced within the nepheloid layer over reef
sites suggesting efficient particle trapping by the sponges. The reef
matrix sediments are enriched in organic carbon, nitrogen carbonate, relative
to surrounding and underlying sediments. The sponges baffle and trap suspended
sediments from water masses, which in one trough have a residence time
of approximately 6 days, ensuring a close association of the sponges with
the bottom waters. The location of the reef complexes at the heads of
canyons provide a means of regionally funnelling particulate material
that sponges can trap to enrich their environment with organic carbon
and biogenic Si. Like deep-sea coral reefs, the sponge reefs are a remote
and poorly known ecosystem that can present logistical challenges and
survey costs. Also like deep-sea coral reefs, many of the hexactinosidan
sponge reefs have been damaged or destroyed by the groundfish trawl fishery.
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