Dirivultid copepods (Siphonostomatoida), one of the most successful meiobenthic organisms found at deep-sea hydrothermal vents, have been the focus of most previous ecological studies among meiofauna in these habitats. The ecology of Harpacticoida, a major benthic copepod group in typical deep-sea floor, however, is not well understood in terms of variations in community structure and controlling factors at venting sites. The spatial heterogeneities in benthic harpacticoid composition and their association with environmental parameters were investigated at hydrothermal vent chimney structures in the calderas of three neighbouring sea knolls (Bayonnaise Knoll, Myojin Knoll and Myojin-sho Caldera) in the western North Pacific. While a previous study had reported the distribution of dirivultids was strongly associated with spatial differences in stable carbon isotopic signatures (δ13C) of organic matter in the detritus on active chimneys in the field, multivariate analyses detected no significant corelation between the parameter and harpacticoid composition in this study. Instead, high associations of the harpacticoid composition with differences in water depth and total organic carbon (TOC) concentration were detected. Ectinosomatidae dominated at vent sites with lower TOC values in the shallowest Bayonnaise Knoll, while they were less prevalent at deeper vent fields in the other knolls, where Miraciidae was the most abundant family. This study indicated the availability of vent chemoautotrophic carbon is not a primary factor controlling the composition of harpacticoids even in the habitats on the hydrothermal vents, but instead by the food amount, regardless of its resources (including marine snow from the sea surface), in the study area.
Stygiopontius senokuchiae is a hydrothermal-vent-specific copepod species (Dirivultidae, Siphonostomatoida) and abundantly distributes near vent orifices. This species is thought to have an early juvenile planktic stage, and previous studies using bulk tissue stable-isotope and radioisotope data suggest that adults ingest chemoautotrophic microbes growing on vent chimneys. However, ontogenetic changes in their diets have not been investigated. We analysed gut contents of copepodite I to adult stages of S. senokuchiae collected from a hydrothermal-vent chimney at the Izu-Ogasawara Arc to check for the presence of bacterial cells in oral tubes and guts. We compared these results with an unidentified co-occurring calanoid and a species of Ectinosoma (Harpacticoida) and to other Siphonostomatoid copepods, namely Hatschekia labracis (Hatschekiidae), which was attached to a scarbreast tuskfin (Choerodon azurio, Labridae), and Asterocheres sp. 1 (Asterocheridae), which was attached to a spirastrellid sponge. Carbon isotope ratios of S. senokuchiae at different stages and Ectinosoma were measured to complement the nutritional insights obtained from gut-content analysis. Our results clearly showed that most S. senokuchiae individuals possessed bacteria in the oral tube or gut regardless of growth stage, whereas the coexisting Ectinosoma and calanoid did not. The carbon isotopic compositions confirmed that S. senokuchiae gains its nutrition from chemoautotrophic bacteria that use the rTCA carbon-fixation pathway. Comparisons with other Siphonostomatoida copepods suggest that Dirivultidae are specifically adapted to feed on bacteria at hydrothermal-vent chimneys, allowing their high dominance and evolutionary success in these habitats.
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