Abstract: | The effect of commercial dragging on sedimentary organic matter was examined in two field experiments using different types of gear. A heavy scallop dredge caused two types of organic matter translocation—some of the surficial organic matter was exported from the drag site and the remaining material was mixed into subsurface sediments. Phospholipid analysis indicated decreases in various classes of microbial, with relative increases in the contribution of anaerobic bacteria to the microbial community. An other trawl that largely remained above the sediment-water interface caused little change in organic matter profiles, although 7Be profiles suggest an export of the surficial horizon. Sediment mixing by some types of gear will likely result in burial of labile organic matter and hence may shift sediment metabolism toward microbial and anaerobic food chains. |