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Depth-related radiolarian assemblage in the water-column and surface sediments of the Japan Sea
Authors:Takuya Itaki  
Affiliation:Institute for Marine Resources and Environment, Geological Survey of Japan, AIST, Higashi 1-1-1, AIST Central 7, Tsukuba 305-8567, Japan
Abstract:Plankton tows and surface sediments from the Japan Sea, a marginal sea of the northwestern Pacific, were examined to study the depth distribution of modern radiolarians. The depth distribution patterns between the living assemblage in the water-column and the thanatocoenose in surface sediments are similar to each other, indicating that the depth-related assemblage in sediments is closely related to the living depths of major species. Four clear restrictions of many species to discrete depth zones are recognized in the water-column, from the surface down to 2000 m: (1) upper subsurface-water species, which are abundant from 40 to 120 m (Larcopyle butschlii juvenile form, Spirocyrtis subscalaris, Spongodiscus resurgens and Lipmanella virchowii); (2) lower subsurface-water species, which are abundant from 40 to 300 m (Larcopyle butschlii adult form, Ceratocyrtis histricosa and Spongotrochus glacialis); (3) intermediate-water species, which have population maxima from 160 to 300 m (Ceratospyris borealis); and (4) deep-water species, which have maxima between 1000 and 2000 m (Cycladophora davisiana and Actinomma boreale). Only a few specimens of A. boreale were found in the water-column ranging from 1000 to 2000 m depth, although this is a dominant species in surface sediments from depths below 2000 m of which the dominance increases with water depth. A. boreale may live mainly in the bottom water. Cycladophora davisiana and A. boreale, which characterize the Japan Sea deep assemblage, are naturally shallow or intermediate dwellers in other oceans. On the other hand, the typical deep-dwellers (e.g. Cornutella profunda, Cyrtopera languncula and Peripyramis circumtexta) of other oceans have not been found in the Japan Sea. Such a peculiar deep assemblage is a result of the deep circulation system in the Japan Sea and the shallow depths of the sills around it.
Keywords:radiolaria   depth distribution   Japan Sea   plankton net   surface sediments
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