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ventfauna

Ventfauna are animals that inhabit hydrothermal vent ecosystems on the deep ocean floor. These communities form around vents where seawater circulates through the crust, is heated, and mixes with reduced chemical compounds such as hydrogen sulfide and methane. The primary energy source for ventfauna is chemosynthesis carried out by symbiotic bacteria, which oxidize these compounds to fix carbon.

Vent fields occur along mid-ocean ridges and some back-arc basins. Communities cluster around vent discharge points,

Ecology and adaptations: Many ventfauna lack conventional digestion and rely on symbionts or microbial mats for

Discovery and significance: Hydrothermal vent communities were first observed in 1977 by the crew of the submersible

Threats and conservation: Vent ecosystems are vulnerable to disturbance from deep-sea mining and vent-field disruption, highlighting

and
vent
faunal
assemblages
can
be
long-lived
at
stable
fields
or
transient
at
newly
formed
vents.
Prominent
members
include
giant
tubeworms
(Riftia),
Bathymodiolus
mussels,
vesicomyid
clams,
Rimicaris
shrimps,
and
various
snails
and
crabs.
Many
species
host
symbiotic
bacteria
in
specialized
tissues
such
as
the
trophosome
or
gills,
which
provide
much
of
their
nutrition.
energy.
They
tolerate
high
temperatures,
high
pressures,
and
metal-rich
fluids,
and
have
adaptations
such
as
reduced
or
specialized
gut
systems
and
modified
blood
for
efficient
oxygen
transport.
Reproduction
involves
free-swimming
larvae
that
disperse
to
colonize
new
vents
as
fields
emerge
or
expand.
Alvin
at
the
Galápagos
Rift,
revealing
a
thriving
biota
powered
by
chemosynthesis
rather
than
photosynthesis.
the
importance
of
scientific
study
and
careful
management
to
protect
these
unique
life-supporting
habitats.