Comparison of deep-water coral reefs and lithoherms off southeastern USA

被引:55
|
作者
Reed, JK [1 ]
机构
[1] Harbor Branch Oceanog Inst Inc, Div Biomed Marine Res, Ft Pierce, FL 34946 USA
关键词
Oculina; Lophelia; lithoherm; deep-water; coral reef;
D O I
10.1023/A:1016593018389
中图分类号
Q17 [水生生物学];
学科分类号
071004 ;
摘要
Two types of deep-water coral bioherms occur off the coast of southeastern United States: Oculina and Lophelia/Enallopsammia. The deep-water Oculina bioherms form an extensive reef system at depths of 70-100 m along the shelf edge off central eastern Florida. These reefs are comprised of numerous pinnacles and ridges, 335 m in height. Each pinnacle is a bank of unconsolidated sediment and coral debris that is capped on the slopes and crest with living and dead colonies of Oculina varicosa, the ivory tree coral. In comparison, deep-water reefs of Lophelia pertusa and Enallopsammia profunda corals occur at depths of 500-850 m (maximum 150-m relief) along the base of the Florida-Hatteras slope in the Straits of Florida. On the western edge of the Blake Plateau off South Carolina and Georgia, 54-m high banks of Enallopsammia and Lophelia occur at depths of 490-550 m, whereas on the eastern edge of the plateau the reefs form structures 146 m in height and at depths of 640-869 m. The geomorphology and functional structure of both the Oculina and Lophelia reefs are similar. North of Little Bahama Bank, at depths of 1000-1300 m, a region of bioherms is dominated by the coral Solenosinilia sp.; Lophelia is reportedly absent. This paper summarizes 25 years of submersible studies on the deep-water Oculina reefs, describes submersible reconnaissance of deep-water Lophelia reefs off the southeastern United States, and contrasts these types of bioherms with the deep-water lithoherms in the Straits of Florida west of the Bahamas.
引用
收藏
页码:57 / 69
页数:13
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