Benthic biodiversity hotspots in the Weddell Sea: Bridging geomorphology, biogeography, and oceanography across scales

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Abstract

Benthic ecosystems are shaped by seafloor structure, yet linking geomorphology and biology across environmental gradients remains challenging. Here, we integrate seafloor imagery, multiscale bathymetry, and predictive modelling to quantify benthic biodiversity and its environmental drivers along the Powell Basin flank of the Antarctic Peninsula. Steep geomorphological landforms (terraces and steep slopes) hosted maximal densities and distinct communities, with significant enrichment of corals, sponges, ophiuroids, and sea pens. The marked congruence of slope across bathymetric resolutions enabled regional upscaling, estimating a standing stock of ∼96 billion individuals across 7,400 km² of the basin flank. Decadal oceanographic models indicate that benthic densities peak in cold bottom water below −0.15 °C. We identified four biodiversity hotspots (∼33 km 2 ) with slopes >35° and depths >1,700 m, with up to threefold higher densities. Hotspots align with the pathway of Weddell Sea Deep Water, where thermal decoupling between bottom and overlying waters indicates dynamic hydrography along steep, biodiverse terrain. Furthermore, contrasting sea-ice cover and stratification regimes suggest distinct cryo-pelagic-benthic coupling around hotspots. The concentration of biodiversity through seafloor geomorphology and ocean circulation bridges Antarctic benthic ecology from habitat to biogeography, with implications for monitoring change and guiding conservation in the warming Weddell Sea.

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