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Featured researches published by Wolf Arntz.


Antarctic Science | 1996

Do Antarctic benthic invertebrates show an extended level of eurybathy

Thomas Brey; Corinna Dahm; M. Gorny; Michael Klages; M. Stiller; Wolf Arntz

Depth distribution data were compared for 172 European and 157 Antarctic benthic invertebrate species occurring in the respective shelf areas. Antarctic species showed significantly wider depth ranges in selected families of the groups Bivalvia, Gastropoda, Amphipoda and Decapoda. No differences were found in Polychaeta, Asteroidea and Ophiuroidea, where European species also showed comparatively wide bathymetric ranges. These extended levels of eurybathy in the Antarctic benthos may be interpreted either as an evolutionary adaptation or pre-adaptation to the oscillation of shelf ice extension during the Antarctic glacial-interglacial cycle.


Ecology | 2005

CHALLENGING THE COLD: CRABS RECONQUER THE ANTARCTIC

Sven Thatje; Klaus Anger; Javier A. Calcagno; Gustavo A. Lovrich; Hans-Otto Pörtner; Wolf Arntz

Recent records of lithodid crabs in deeper waters off the Antarctic continental slope raised the question of the return of crabs to Antarctic waters, following their extinction in the lower Miocene ;15 million years ago. Antarctic cooling may be responsible for the impoverishment of the marine high Antarctic decapod fauna, presently comprising only five benthic shrimp species. Effects of polar conditions on marine life, including lowered metabolic rates and short seasonal food availability, are discussed as main evolutionary driving forces shaping Antarctic diversity. In particular, planktotrophic larval stages should be vulnerable to the mismatch of prolonged development and short periods of food avail- ability, selecting against complex life cycles. We hypothesize that larval lecithotrophy and cold tolerance, as recently observed in Subantarctic lithodids, represent, together with other adaptations in the adults, key features among the life-history adaptations of lithodids, potentially enabling them to conquer polar ecosystems. The return of benthic top predators to high Antarctic waters under conditions of climate change would considerably alter the benthic communities.


Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology | 1982

An experimental study of macrobenthic colonization and succession, and the importance of seasonal variation in temperate latitudes☆

Wolf Arntz; Heye Rumohr

An extensive field experiment on benthic colonization was carried out at 20 m depth in the western Baltic, between December 1975 and December 1978. The results obtained in 24 large experimental containers (1.5 m2 surface area each), which were exposed at the sea floor and filled with a sandy silt mixture similar to the natural substratum, but taken from a gravel pit to avoid organic contamination, are considered. In the second and third years one container was removed by divers every 2 months. The experimental data are compared with previous studies and with data from the surroundings. Changes in basic (species number, density, biomass) and derived (dominance, diversity, evenness) population statistics are reported. Only the number of species and, to a certain extent, dominance showed a damping of oscillations as might have been expected of a largely stabilized community. Density kept oscillating strongly in the third year, mainly due to an enormous recruitment of Diastylis rathkei (Kroyer), and biomass tended to build up at an ever increasing rate due to the growth of long-lived bivalves such as Mya truncata Linne and Cyprina islandica (Linne). Basic population statistics showed distinct seasonal oscillations developing in the first year. Derived population statistics started oscillating seasonally in the second year and reached a certain regularity, comparable with the surrounding sea floor, in the third. Strong seasonal oscillations in all statistics reflected best a certain maturity of the community. The type of in situ experiment presented in this paper is considered to be a useful tool for the solution of ecological questions and should be repeated.


Polar Biology | 1992

QUANTITATIVE INVESTIGATIONS ON MACROBENTHOS COMMUNITIES OF THE SOUTHEASTERN WEDDELL SEA SHELF BASED ON MULTIBOX CORER SAMPLES.

Dieter Gerdes; Michael Klages; Wolf Arntz; R. Herman; J. Galéron; Stefan Hain

A total of 233 multibox corer samples from 36 stations along the southeastern Weddell Sea shelf and upper continental slope between Atka Bay (70°S) and Gould Bay (78° S), covering a depth range from 170 to 2,037 m, provided biomass and abundance data for analysis of faunal communities. Twenty-eight major taxa were distinguished. Based on these data, 3 different macrobenthos communities could be identified by means of cluster analysis. Hexactinellid sponges, polychaetes and echinoderms were most abundant. Biomass values have been found to be in the range of 94 mg up to 1.6 kg wet weight per sqm. According to TWINSPAN, the sampled stations can be divided into two groups each consisting of two major subgroups. Peracarid crustaceans, polychaetes and bivalves are commonly distributed in the area of investigation whereas others such as sponges, brachiopods, pantopods and asteroids are more confined to Kapp Norvegia and Halley Bay. Biomass values of these latter taxa off Kapp Norvegia were generally higher than in the Halley Bay area.


Deep-sea Research Part I-oceanographic Research Papers | 2001

Meiofaunal distributions on the Peru margin: relationship to oxygen and organic matter availability

Carlos Neira; Javier Sellanes; Lisa A. Levin; Wolf Arntz

A quantitative study of metazoan meiofauna was carried out on bathyal sediments (305, 562, 830 and 1210 m) along a transect within and beneath the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) in the southeastern Pacific off Callao, Peru (128S). Meiobenthos densities ranged from 1517 (upper slope, middle of OMZ) to 440– 548 ind. 10 cm � 2 (lower slope stations, beneath the OMZ). Nematodes were the numerically dominant meiofaunal taxon at every station, followed by copepods and nauplii. Increasing bottom-water oxygen concentration and decreasing organic matter availability downslope were correlated with observed changes in meiofaunal abundance. The 300-m site, located in the middle of the OMZ, differed significantly in meiofaunal abundance, dominance, and in vertical distribution pattern from the deeper sites. At 305 m, nematodes amounted to over 99% of total meiofauna; about 70% of nematodes were found in the 2–5 cm interval. At the deeper sites, about 50% were restricted to the top 1 cm. The importance of copepods and nauplii increased consistently with depth, reaching � 12% of the total meiofauna at the deepest site. The observation of high nematode abundances at oxygen concentrations 50.02 ml l � 1 supports the hypothesis that densities are enhanced by an indirect positive effect of low oxygen involving (a) reduction of predators and competitors and (b) preservation of organic matter leading to high food availability and quality. Food input and quality, represented here by chloroplastic pigment equivalents (CPE) and sedimentary labile organic compounds (protein, carbohydrates and lipids), were strongly, positively correlated with nematode abundance. By way of contrast, oxygen exhibited a strong negative correlation, overriding food availability, with abundance of other meiofauna such as copepods and nauplii. These taxa were absent at the 300-m site.


Polar Biology | 1992

Reproductive biology of caridean decapods from the Weddell Sea

M. Gorny; Wolf Arntz; Andrew Clarke; Deborah J. Gore

SummaryData on reproductive biology are presented for five benthic caridean shrimps from the high Antarctic (Chorismus antarcticus, Notocrangon antarcticus, Nematocarcinus lanceopes, Lebbeus antarcticus and Eualus kinzeri). The first three species were very common on the Weddell Sea shelf and upper slope, whereas only a few individuals of the other two species were caught-but these did include some ovigerous females. Our measurements include size at first maturity, fecundity (total number and mass of eggs), individual egg mass, egg length, ovary indices, maximum size encountered and documentation of the reproductive cycle in spring and summer. Egg number generally increases with female size, and the largest species (N. lanceopes) also carries the highest number of eggs. The eggs of all high Antarctic species are large, the extreme being L. antarcticus with an egg length of up to 3.3 mm. For C. antarcticus and N. antarcticus, which have wide geographic distributions, a comparison is made with older published and unpublished data from the Subantarctic (South Georgia). High Antarctic representatives of these two species grow to a larger maximum size, attain sexual maturity later in their life cycle, and produce fewer and larger eggs in relation to both carapace length and female mass, than their Subantarctic counterparts.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 1991

Benthos communities in oxygen deficient shelf and upper slope areas of the Peruvian and Chilean Pacific coast, and changes caused by El Niño

Wolf Arntz; Juan Tarazona; Victor A. Gallardo; Luis A. Flores; Horst Salzwedel

Abstract Besides a well oxygenated shallow water area characterized by an extremely rich benthic life, most of the Peruvian and Chilean continental shelf and upper slope lies within an oxygen minimum zone (omz), the poor macrobenthic colonization of which is in striking contrast to the abundant pelagic life in the overlying waters. However, the eukaryotic benthos in this zone shares the seafloor with an important prokaryotic component of filamentous (‘sphagetti’) bacteria belonging mainly to the genus Thioploca. Under ‘normal’, non-Niño conditions, near-seafloor oxygen saturation values in this area rarely exceed 0.5 ml 1−1, and in some cases the bottoms are even anoxic. During strong El Niños, saturation periodically increases to >3.5 ml l−1, and higher oxygenation may persist for more than a year after the end of the event proper (which is characterized by increased water temperatures). In the shallow parts of the omz, the changes induced by El Niño cause drastic increases of macrobenthic density, biomass and diversity; immigration of benthos and fish species from (sub)tropical equatorial and oceanic areas; changes in trophic structure; and reduction of ‘spaghetti’ bacteria. In the case of the particularly strong 1982–83 El Niño, the communities of the shallower part of the omz had shifted back into their pre-Niño state about 13 months after the end of the warming event. In the deeper part of the omz, despite a similarly strong increase of oxygen saturation, a clearly positive development of macrobenthos during El Niño could not be observed. The reasons that may be responsible for this difference are discussed.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2009

Biomonitoring of TBT contamination and imposex incidence along 4700 km of Argentinean shoreline (SW Atlantic: From 38S to 54S)

Gregorio Bigatti; Mónica A. Primost; Maximiliano Cledón; Andrés Averbuj; Norbert Theobald; Wolfgang Gerwinski; Wolf Arntz; Elba Morriconi; Pablo E. Penchaszadeh

The imposex incidence and TBT pollution were investigated along 4,700km of Argentinean coast, including city harbors and proximal zones without marine traffic. We analyzed 1805 individuals from 12 gastropod species, including families Volutidae, Muricidae, Nassariidea, Calyptraidae, Marginellidae, and Buccinidae, and found the imposex phenomenon for the first time in six species. In high marine traffic zones, TBT pollution was registered and the percentage of imposex was high, while these occurrences were null in areas without boat traffic. The species that best reflect the degree of imposex were those inhabiting sandy/muddy or mixed bottoms. TBT determination and imposex incidence indicate that pollution was focused only in ports with high marine traffic or in areas where ship hulls are painted. This is the first report of an imposex-sediment approach to evaluate organotin contamination along the coast of a South American country.


Polar Biology | 2004

Antarctic reptant decapods: more than a myth?

Sven Thatje; Wolf Arntz

The impoverished Antarctic decapod fauna is one of the most conspicuous biodiversity phenomena in polar science. Although physiological and ecological approaches have tried to explain the reason for the low decapod biodiversity pattern in the Southern Ocean, the complexity of this problem is still not completely understood. The scant records of crabs south of the Polar Front were always considered as exceptional, and have mostly been ignored by marine biologists world-wide, creating one of the most dogmatic paradigms in polar science. We herein review the record of both adults and larvae of reptants from the Southern Ocean. At present, several species of only lithodid crabs maintain considerable adult populations in circum-Antarctic waters, although they remain absent from the high-Antarctic shelves.


African Journal of Marine Science | 1987

Changes in the structure of a shallow sandy-beach community in Peru during an El Niño event

Wolf Arntz; Thomas Brey; Juan Tarazona; A. Robles

Many infaunal sandy-bottom communities in shallow waters of the Peruvian upwelling system are inhabited by large coexisting populations of the surf clams Mesodesma donacium and Donax peruvianus as well as by the anomuran mole crab Emerita analoga. Under normal conditions, equilibrium states are possible with any one of these species dominating. A Mesodesma community south of Lima in Peru was investigated over 2,5 years, covering periods prior to, during and after the El Nino (EN) of 1982–83. It was revisited several times later. Growth, recruitment and mortality and, therefore, production of Mesodesma and Donax varied to some extent before EN. However, during the event Mesodesma became locally extinct and had not recolonized the area by July 1986, three years after the return of normal temperatures. Donax, which took over immediately after EN, never reached the densities of the former dominant Mesodesma. Emerita remained a rare species as well, whereas spionid polychaetes increased in importance. The medi...

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Jürgen Laudien

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Thomas Brey

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Julian Gutt

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Dieter Gerdes

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Josep Maria Gili

Spanish National Research Council

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Juan Tarazona

National University of San Marcos

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Rainer Knust

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Katja Mintenbeck

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Marko Herrmann

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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