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Experimental tests for particle size-dependent bioturbation in the deep ocean

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Title Experimental tests for particle size-dependent bioturbation in the deep ocean
Names Wheatcroft, Robert A. (creator)
Date Issued 1992 (iso8601)
Abstract The potential for particle size-dependent bioturbation rates was experimentally tested at 1,240
m in the Santa Catalina Basin (eastern Pacific). Spherical glass bead tracers in five size classes (8-
16, 17-31, 32-62, 63-125, and 126-420 μm) were spread over the sediment surface and tube cored
997 d later. Downcore concentrations of glass beads were enumerated in each of the five size
categories and Page's L-test was used to test the null hypothesis of equal vertical penetration of
all size classes of tracer. In all cores the null hypothesis was rejected; finer tracers penetrated deeper
into the sediment. In two of the three cores, vertical biodiffusivities were computed from concentration
profiles of downcore tracers. These also showed size dependence, with biodiffusivities
ranging from 1 cm² yr¯¹ for the 8-1 6-μm fraction to 0.1 cm² yr¯¹ for the 125-420-μm size class.
These data demonstrate that vertical bioturbation rates are particle size-dependent in Santa Catalina
Basin. The likely cause is preferential ingestion and downward transport of fine particles by deposit
feeders.
Genre Article
Identifier Wheatcroft, R. A. (1992). Experimental tests for particle size-dependent bioturbation in the deep ocean. Limnology and oceanography, 37(1), 90-104.

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