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Featured researches published by Ben Boorman.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The Effects of Natural Iron Fertilisation on Deep-Sea Ecology: The Crozet Plateau, Southern Indian Ocean

George A. Wolff; David S.M. Billett; Brian J. Bett; Jens Holtvoeth; Tania FitzGeorge-Balfour; Elizabeth H. Fisher; Ian A. Cross; Roger Shannon; Ian Salter; Ben Boorman; Nicola King; Alan J. Jamieson; Frédéric Chaillan

The addition of iron to high-nutrient low-chlorophyll (HNLC) oceanic waters stimulates phytoplankton, leading to greater primary production. Large-scale artificial ocean iron fertilization (OIF) has been proposed as a means of mitigating anthropogenic atmospheric CO2, but its impacts on ocean ecosystems below the photic zone are unknown. Natural OIF, through the addition of iron leached from volcanic islands, has been shown to enhance primary productivity and carbon export and so can be used to study the effects of OIF on life in the ocean. We compared two closely-located deep-sea sites (∼400 km apart and both at ∼4200 m water depth) to the East (naturally iron fertilized; +Fe) and South (HNLC) of the Crozet Islands in the southern Indian Ocean. Our results suggest that long-term geo-engineering of surface oceanic waters via artificial OIF would lead to significant changes in deep-sea ecosystems. We found that the +Fe area had greater supplies of organic matter inputs to the seafloor, including polyunsaturated fatty acid and carotenoid nutrients. The +Fe site also had greater densities and biomasses of large deep-sea animals with lower levels of evenness in community structuring. The species composition was also very different, with the +Fe site showing similarities to eutrophic sites in other ocean basins. Moreover, major differences occurred in the taxa at the +Fe and HNLC sites revealing the crucial role that surface oceanic conditions play in changing and structuring deep-sea benthic communities.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2011

Deep-sea echinoderm oxygen consumption rates and an interclass comparison of metabolic rates in Asteroidea, Crinoidea, Echinoidea, Holothuroidea and Ophiuroidea

S.J.M. Hughes; Henry A. Ruhl; Lawrence E. Hawkins; Chris Hauton; Ben Boorman; David S.M. Billett

SUMMARY Echinoderms are important components of deep-sea communities because of their abundance and the fact that their activities contribute to carbon cycling. Estimating the echinoderm contribution to food webs and carbon cycling is important to our understanding of the functioning of the deep-sea environment and how this may alter in the future as climatic changes take place. Metabolic rate data from deep-sea echinoderm species are, however, scarce. To obtain such data from abyssal echinoderms, a novel in situ respirometer system, the benthic incubation chamber system (BICS), was deployed by remotely operated vehicle (ROV) at depths ranging from 2200 to 3600 m. Oxygen consumption rates were obtained in situ from four species of abyssal echinoderm (Ophiuroidea and Holothuroidea). The design and operation of two versions of BICS are presented here, together with the in situ respirometry measurements. These results were then incorporated into a larger echinoderm metabolic rate data set, which included the metabolic rates of 84 echinoderm species from all five classes (Asteroidea, Crinoidea, Echinoidea, Holothuroidea and Ophiuroidea). The allometric scaling relationships between metabolic rate and body mass derived in this study for each echinoderm class were found to vary. Analysis of the data set indicated no change in echinoderm metabolic rate with depth (by class or phylum). The allometric scaling relationships presented here provide updated information for mass-dependent deep-sea echinoderm metabolic rate for use in ecosystem models, which will contribute to the study of both shallow water and deep-sea ecosystem functioning and biogeochemistry.


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2010

Long-term change in the abyssal NE Atlantic: The ‘Amperima Event’ revisited

David S.M. Billett; Brian J. Bett; W.D.K. Reid; Ben Boorman; Imants G. Priede


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2007

Estimating carbon, silica and diatom export from a naturally fertilised phytoplankton bloom in the Southern Ocean using PELAGRA: a novel drifting sediment trap

Ian Salter; Richard S. Lampitt; Richard Sanders; Alex J. Poulton; Alan E. S. Kemp; Ben Boorman; Kevin Saw; Richard B. Pearce


Deep-sea Research Part I-oceanographic Research Papers | 2008

Particle export from the euphotic zone: Estimates using a novel drifting sediment trap, 234Th and new production

Richard S. Lampitt; Ben Boorman; Louise Brown; Mike Lucas; Ian Salter; Richard Sanders; Kevin Saw; S. Seeyave; Sandy J. Thomalla; Robert Turnewitsch


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2007

Two abyssal sites in the Southern Ocean influenced by different organic matter inputs: Environmental characterization and preliminary observations on the benthic foraminifera

J.A. Hughes; T. Smith; F. Chaillan; Brian J. Bett; David S.M. Billett; Ben Boorman; Elizabeth H. Fisher; M. Frenz; George A. Wolff


Methods for the Study of Marine Benthos, Fourth Edition | 2013

Deep‐Sea Benthic Sampling

Alan J. Jamieson; Ben Boorman; Daniel O.B. Jones


Archive | 2004

PELAGRA: early development of an autonomous, neutrally buoyant sediment trap

Kevin Saw; Ben Boorman; Richard S. Lampitt; Richard Sanders


HERMES 3rd Annual Meeting, Conference programme and abstracts | 2008

Metazoan meiofauna in the Nazaré Canyon: observations and experimental evidence

Jeroen Ingels; Ben Boorman; David S.M. Billett; Ann Vanreusel


HERMES 2nd Annual Meeting, Conference programme and abstracts | 2007

What's on a nematode's menu?: an experimental approach for slopes and canyons

Jeroen Ingels; Pieter Van den Driessche; Ilse De Mesel; S. Vanhove; Ann Vanreusel; Ben Boorman; David S.M. Billett

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David S.M. Billett

National Oceanography Centre

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Brian J. Bett

National Oceanography Centre

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Jeroen Ingels

Plymouth Marine Laboratory

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Robert Turnewitsch

National Oceanography Centre

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