On the Biology of Submarine Caves with Sulphur Springs: Appraisal of13C/12C Ratios as a Guide to Trophic Relations

Abstract
Submarine caves with sulphurous springs at Cape Palinuro, Campania, Italy, have a richer fauna than expected from the known oligotrophic nature of the cave habitat. Warm water containing sulphide issues from springs and rises above the cooler ambient sea-water with a sharp thermocline/chemocline between. The warm water then escapes from the caves mixed with cooler sea-water, probably inducing an inflow of ambient sea-water. Bacterial mats, often dominated by large species of attached bacteria resemblingBeggiatoa, line the upper parts of the inner caves and act as primary producers, fixing CO2by means of the autotrophic enzyme ribulosebisphosphate carboxylase. Many of the animals in the innermost parts of the caves live close to the chemocline or just below, where they would experience fall-out of bacterial organic matter, and some carry filamentous bacteria on their tubes and hard parts. Dominant members of the community include sponges, cnidarians, and tubicolous polychaetes.