Light penetration structures the acoustic deep scattering layers in the global ocean
byAksnes, D.L., A. Røstad, S. Kaartvedt, U. Martinez, C. M. Duarte, X. Irigoien
Year:2017
Bibliography
Aksnes,D.L., A. Røstad, S. Kaartvedt, U. Martinez, C.M. Duarte, X. Irigoien. 2017. Light penetration structures the acoustic deep scattering layers in the global ocean. Science Advances Vol. 3, no. 5, e1602468, DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1602468
Abstract
The deep scattering layer (DSL) is a ubiquitous acoustic signature found across all oceans and arguably the dominant feature structuring the pelagic open ocean ecosystem. It is formed by mesopelagic fishes and pelagic invertebrates. The DSL animals are an important food source for marine megafauna and contribute to the biological carbon pump through the active flux of organic carbon transported in their daily vertical migrations. They occupy depths from 200 to 1000 m at daytime and migrate to a varying degree into surface waters at nighttime. Their daytime depth, which determines the migration amplitude, varies across the global ocean in concert with water mass properties, in particular the oxygen regime, but the causal underpinning of these correlations has been unclear. We present evidence that the broad variability in the oceanic DSL daytime depth observed during the Malaspina 2010 Circumnavigation Expedition is governed by variation in light penetration. We find that the DSL depth distribution conforms to a common optical depth layer across the global ocean and that a correlation between dissolved oxygen and light penetration provides a parsimonious explanation for the association of shallow DSL distributions with hypoxic waters. In enhancing understanding of this phenomenon, our results should improve the ability to predict and model the dynamics of one of the largest animal biomass components on earth, with key roles in the oceanic biological carbon pump and food web
Keywords
Deep Scattering LayersMesopelagic FishesVertical DistributionGlobal DistributionLight PenetrationDissolved Oxygen