Skip to main content
Contribution to Book
Open Ocean Deep Sea
Marine & Environmental Sciences Faculty Books and Book Chapters
  • Jeroen Ingels
  • Malcolm Clark
  • Michael Vecchione, National Museum of National History, Smithsonian Institute, Washington DC
  • Jose A. A. Perez
  • Lisa A. Levin, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
  • Imants G. Priede, University of Aberdeen - United Kingdom
  • Tracey Sutton, Nova Southeastern University
  • Ashley Rowden
  • C. R. Smith
  • Moriaki Yasuhara
  • Andrew K. Sweetman, International Research Institute of Stavanger
  • Thomas Soltwedel
  • R. S. Santos, University of the Azores
  • Bhavani Narayanaswamy
  • Henry A. Ruhl
  • Katsunori Fujikura
  • Linda Amaral-Zettler
  • Daniel Jones
  • Andrew Gates
  • P. V. R. Snelgrove
  • Patricio Bernal
  • Saskia van Gaever
Book Title
First Global Marine Assessment
Document Type
Book Chapter
Description
The deep sea comprises the seafloor, water column and biota therein below aspecified depth contour. There are differences in views among experts and agencies regarding the appropriate depth to delineate the “deep sea”. This chapter uses a 200 metre depth contour as a starting point, so that the “deep sea” represents 63 per cent of the Earth’s surface area and about 98.5 per cent of Earth’s habitat volume (96.5 per cent of which is pelagic). However, much of the information presented in this chapter focuses on biodiversity of waters substantially deeper than 200 m. Many of the other regional divisions of Chapter 36 include treatments of shelf and slope biodiversity in continental-shelf and slope areas deeper than 200m. Moreover Chapters 42 and 45 on coldwater corals and vents and seeps, respectively, and 51 on canyons, seamounts and other specialized morphological habitat types address aspects of areas in greater detail. The estimates of global biodiversity of the deep sea in this chapter do include all biodiversity in waters and the seafloor below 200 m. However, in the other sections of this chapter redundancy with the other regional chapters is avoided, so that biodiversity of shelf, slope, reef, vents, and specialized habitats is assessed in the respective regional or thematic chapters. AB - The deep sea comprises the seafloor, water column and biota therein below aspecified depth contour. There are differences in views among experts and agencies regarding the appropriate depth to delineate the “deep sea”. This chapter uses a 200 metre depth contour as a starting point, so that the “deep sea” represents 63 per cent of the Earth’s surface area and about 98.5 per cent of Earth’s habitat volume (96.5 per cent of which is pelagic). However, much of the information presented in this chapter focuses on biodiversity of waters substantially deeper than 200 m. Many of the other regional divisions of Chapter 36 include treatments of shelf and slope biodiversity in continental-shelf and slope areas deeper than 200m. Moreover Chapters 42 and 45 on coldwater corals and vents and seeps, respectively, and 51 on canyons, seamounts and other specialized morphological habitat types address aspects of areas in greater detail. The estimates of global biodiversity of the deep sea in this chapter do include all biodiversity in waters and the seafloor below 200 m. However, in the other sections of this chapter redundancy with the other regional chapters is avoided, so that biodiversity of shelf, slope, reef, vents, and specialized habitats is assessed in the respective regional or thematic chapters.
Publication Date
1-1-2016
Publisher
Oceans and Law of the Sea, United Nations
Disciplines
Citation Information
Jeroen Ingels, Malcolm Clark, Michael Vecchione, Jose A. A. Perez, et al.. "Open Ocean Deep Sea" Brussels(2016)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/tracey-sutton/65/