Biogeosciences (Apr 2014)

Environmental forcing of the Campeche cold-water coral province, southern Gulf of Mexico

  • D. Hebbeln,
  • C. Wienberg,
  • P. Wintersteller,
  • A. Freiwald,
  • M. Becker,
  • L. Beuck,
  • C. Dullo,
  • G. P. Eberli,
  • S. Glogowski,
  • L. Matos,
  • N. Forster,
  • H. Reyes-Bonilla,
  • M. Taviani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-11-1799-2014
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
pp. 1799 – 1815

Abstract

Read online

With an extension of > 40 km2 the recently discovered Campeche cold-water coral province located at the northeastern rim of the Campeche Bank in the southern Gulf of Mexico belongs to the largest coherent cold-water coral areas discovered so far. The Campeche province consists of numerous 20–40 m-high elongated coral mounds that are developed in intermediate water depths of 500 to 600 m. The mounds are colonized by a vivid cold-water coral ecosystem that covers the upper flanks and summits. The rich coral community is dominated by the framework-building Scleractinia Enallopsammia profunda and Lophelia pertusa, while the associated benthic megafauna shows a rather scarce occurrence. The recent environmental setting is characterized by a high surface water production caused by a local upwelling center and a dynamic bottom-water regime comprising vigorous bottom currents, obvious temporal variability, and strong density contrasts, which all together provide optimal conditions for the growth of cold-water corals. This setting – potentially supported by the diel vertical migration of zooplankton in the Campeche area – controls the delivering of food particles to the corals. The Campeche cold-water coral province is, thus, an excellent example highlighting the importance of the oceanographic setting in securing the food supply for the development of large and vivid cold-water coral ecosystems.