Benthic Protozoa and Metazoa Living in Deep Anoxic and Hydrogen Sulfide Conditions of the Black Sea: Direct Observations of Actively Moving Ciliophora and Nematoda  

Nelli G. Sergeeva1 , Sofia A. Mazlumyan1 , Anna Lichtschlag2 , Moritz Holtappels2
1. Institute of the Biology of the Southern Seas, Sevastopol, Crimea, Russia
2. Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Germany
Author    Correspondence author
International Journal of Marine Science, 2014, Vol. 4, No. 49   doi: 10.5376/ijms.2014.04.0049
Received: 04 Jun., 2014    Accepted: 02 Jul., 2014    Published: 07 Aug., 2014
© 2014 BioPublisher Publishing Platform
This is an open access article published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Preferred citation for this article:

Sergeeva et al., 2014, Benthic Protozoa and Metazoa Living under Anoxic and Sulfide Conditions in the Black Sea: Direct Observations of Actively Moving Ciliophora and Nematoda, International Journal of Marine Science, Vol.4, No.49 1-11 (doi: 10.5376/ijms.2014.04.0049)

Abstract

This study was conducted to search for living fauna in seafloor sediments from nearly 300 m water depth in the outflow area of the Bosporus into the Black Sea. During our investigations we identified seven higher level meiobenthic taxa in the anoxic and sulfidic sediments at 296 m water depth: Gromiida, Ciliophora, Foraminifera (soft-shelled), Nematoda, Kinorhyncha, Harpacticoida and one taxonomically unknown form. Hence, these Black Sea sediments seem to be a natural habitat for some eukaryotes. Furthermore, direct microscopic observations of alive and actively moving fauna demonstrates the presence of two species of ciliates, one species of free-living nematodes, and one unknown organism. As evidence, the activity of these organisms was recorded with a video camera. This indicates that metazoa and protozoa can live in the Black Sea under these more extreme conditions. However, the environmental factors and the specific physiological and biochemical processes used by the benthic fauna to retain metabolic activity and facilitate survival under anoxic and sulfidic conditions are still unknown. As well the distribution of benthos as a whole and of the individual taxa in other sulfidic sediments of the Black Sea needs to be investigated. Nevertheless, the presented observation of alive benthic organisms opens new perspectives to study of metazoan and protozoan life in Black Sea sediments lacking oxygen and containing sulfide.

Keywords
Live eukaryotes; Deep-water; Anoxia; Abundance trends; Black Sea
[Full-Text PDF] [Full-Flipping PDF] [Full-Text HTML]
International Journal of Marine Science
• Volume 4
View Options
. PDF(1013KB)
. FPDF(win)
. HTML
. Online fPDF
Associated material
. Readers' comments
Other articles by authors
. Nelli G. Sergeeva
. Sofia A. Mazlumyan
. Anna Lichtschlag
. Moritz Holtappels
Related articles
. Live eukaryotes
. Deep-water
. Anoxia
. Abundance trends
. Black Sea
Tools
. Email to a friend
. Post a comment