About: Hadal zone is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 338 publications have been published within this topic receiving 7440 citations. The topic is also known as: hadopelagic zone.
TL;DR: The application of existing, rather than the generation of novel, ecological theory offers the best prospect of understanding deep ocean ecology.
Abstract: Hadal trenches account for the deepest 45% of the oceanic depth range and host active and diverse biological communities. Advances in our understanding of hadal community structure and function have, until recently, relied on technologies that were unable to document ecological information. Renewed international interest in exploring the deepest marine environment on Earth provides impetus to re-evaluate hadal community ecology. We review the abiotic and biotic characteristics of trenches and offer a contemporary perspective of trench ecology. The application of existing, rather than the generation of novel, ecological theory offers the best prospect of understanding deep ocean ecology.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed global biogeographic provinces for the lower bathyal and abyssal benthos (>800m depths) in order to aid high seas management efforts.
TL;DR: The enrichment of heterotrophic population in the hadal water (6,000 ∼10,257 m) microbial communities, whereas the chemolithotrophic populations were more abundant in the upper abyssal waters, suggested that thehadal microbial biosphere was supported by the endogenous recycling of organic matter in theHadal waters associated with the trench geomorphology.
Abstract: Hadal oceans at water depths below 6,000 m are the least-explored aquatic biosphere. The Challenger Deep, located in the western equatorial Pacific, with a water depth of ∼11 km, is the deepest ocean on Earth. Microbial communities associated with waters from the sea surface to the trench bottom (0 ∼10,257 m) in the Challenger Deep were analyzed, and unprecedented trench microbial communities were identified in the hadal waters (6,000 ∼10,257 m) that were distinct from the abyssal microbial communities. The potentially chemolithotrophic populations were less abundant in the hadal water than those in the upper abyssal waters. The emerging members of chemolithotrophic nitrifiers in the hadal water that likely adapt to the higher flux of electron donors were also different from those in the abyssal waters that adapt to the lower flux of electron donors. Species-level niche separation in most of the dominant taxa was also found between the hadal and abyssal microbial communities. Considering the geomorphology and the isolated hydrotopographical nature of the Mariana Trench, we hypothesized that the distinct hadal microbial ecosystem was driven by the endogenous recycling of organic matter in the hadal waters associated with the trench geomorphology.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used an autonomous micro-profiling system to assess benthic oxygen consumption rates at Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench in the central west Pacific, which at almost 11,000m depth represents the deepest oceanic site on Earth.
Abstract: Microbes regulate the decomposition of organic matter in marine sediments. Measurements at the deepest oceanic site on Earth reveal high rates of microbial activity, potentially fuelled by the deposition of organic matter. Microbes control the decomposition of organic matter inmarine sediments. Decomposition, in turn, contributes to oceanic nutrient regeneration and influences the preservation of organic carbon1. Generally, rates of benthic decomposition decline with increasing water depth, although given the vast extent of the abyss, deep-sea sediments are quantitatively important for the global carbon cycle2,3. However, the deepest regions of the ocean have remained virtually unexplored4. Here, we present observations of microbial activity in sediments at Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench in the central west Pacific, which at almost 11,000 m depth represents the deepest oceanic site on Earth. We used an autonomous micro-profiling system to assess benthic oxygen consumption rates. We show that although the presence of macrofauna is restricted at Challenger Deep, rates of biological consumption of oxygen are high, exceeding rates at a nearby 6,000-m-deep site by a factor of two. Consistently, analyses of sediments collected from the two sites reveal higher concentrations of microbial cells at Challenger Deep. Furthermore, analyses of sediment 210Pb profiles reveal relatively high sediment deposition in the trench. We conclude that the elevated deposition of organic matter at Challenger Deep maintains intensified microbial activity at the extreme pressures that characterize this environment.
TL;DR: It is proposed that hadal trenches will be the ultimate sink for a significant proportion of the microplastics disposed in the ocean, which could have large consequences for fragile deep-sea ecosystems.