Deep-sea mining discharge can disrupt midwater food webs
DOWD Michael H. ;ASSAD Victoria E. ;CAZARES-NUESSER Alexus E. ;DRAZEN Jeffrey C. ;GOETZE Erica ;WHITE Angelicque E. ;POPP Brian N.
Auteur moral
Auteur secondaire
Résumé
"The Clarion-Clipperton Zone contains extensive beds of polymetallic nodules on the abyssal seafloor, with vast areas (~1.5 million km2) under license for deep-sea mining. Mining companies have proposed discharging excess waste generated during nodule extraction in the lower mesopelagic and upper bathypelagic zones, which are home to a unique faunal community including zooplankton and micronekton. Here, using compound-specific isotope analysis of amino acids, we find that natural background particles larger than 6?µm form the base of the food web, but will be diluted by the same sized, nutritionally deficient mining-associated particles. Given that 53% of zooplankton taxa are particle feeders and 60% of micronekton taxa are zooplanktivores at proposed discharge depths, there is significant potential for food-web disruption. Therefore, we show that a midwater mining plume could trigger bottom-up ecosystem impacts with potentially severe consequences for the faunal community, extending beyond zooplankton and micronekton to nekton, including large marine predators."
Editeur
Nature Communications
Descripteur Urbamet
Descripteur écoplanete
faune aquatique
;flore aquatique
;industrie minérale
;micropolluant minéral
Thème
Environnement - Nature
;Economie
;Risques
;Ressources - Nuisances
Texte intégral
Article https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-65411-w
Deep-sea mining discharge can disrupt
midwater food webs
Michael H. Dowd 1 , Victoria E. Assad1,3, Alexus E. Cazares-Nuesser 1,3,
Jeffrey C. Drazen 1, Erica Goetze 1, Angelicque E. White 1 & Brian N. Popp 2
The Clarion-Clipperton Zone contains extensive beds of polymetallic nodules
on the abyssal seafloor, with vast areas (~1.5 million km2) under license for
deep-sea mining. Mining companies have proposed discharging excess waste
generated during nodule extraction in the lower mesopelagic and upper
bathypelagic zones, which are home to a unique faunal community including
zooplankton and micronekton. Here, using compound-specific isotope ana-
lysis of amino acids, we find that natural background particles larger than 6 µm
form the base of the food web, but will be diluted by the same sized, nutri-
tionally deficient mining-associated particles. Given that 53% of zooplankton
taxa are particle feeders and 60% of micronekton taxa are zooplanktivores at
proposed discharge depths, there is significant potential for food-web dis-
ruption. Therefore, we show that a midwater mining plume could trigger
bottom-up ecosystem impacts with potentially severe consequences for the
faunal community, extending beyond zooplankton and micronekton to nek-
ton, including large marine predators.
The Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) in the Eastern Topical Pacific is a
region of great interest for proposed deep-sea mining of polymetallic
nodules. The International Seabed Authority, the UN established reg-
ulatory agency1, has granted 19 exploration licenses for polymetallic
nodules covering a vast area of ~1.5 million km2. Previous research has
documented environmental risks ofmining, including biodiversity loss
in seafloor communities2,3. In addition to the seafloor, midwater
communities may also be at risk. During the mining process, nodules
are collected from the abyssal seafloor, along with seawater and
sediments, and transferred through a pipe to a collection ship for
separation of nodules from sediment waste. This seawater-containing
sediment waste, as well as pulverized nodule particles, must be
returned to the ocean. Although the release depth for this waste is
currently unclear, some mining operators have proposed midwater
mining discharge within the lower mesopelagic/upper bathypelagic
zone4,5. The risks tomidwater communities remain poorly understood.
Amidwatermining waste plume is anticipated to negatively affect
mesopelagic fauna, with impacts ranging from replacing or diluting
the food of filter feeders to visual impairment of active predation and
bioluminescent communication6,7. Pelagic food webs are complex,
linking small primary producers in the upper ocean to top consumers
at a range of depths. Diel vertical migration from deeper daytime
depths to shallower nighttime foraging depths is common, vertically
mixing the food web8,9. Additionally, about 5?25% of the organic
matter produced in the euphotic zone is exported to deeper depths
through passive sinking and active transport10,11. The material that
reaches the mesopelagic undergoes aerobic microbial decomposition
and transformation, resulting in a characteristic decrease in organic
carbon and nitrogen content12,13. Themining plume, consisting of deep
abyssal sediments from <2 µm to 63 µm in size14, is predicted to have a
high concentration of low-quality particles, along with fragmented
inorganic nodules. These mining waste particles could clog the
respiratory and olfactory surfaces of organisms across all trophic
levels and obstruct filter-feeding structures6,15.
Of importance to midwater food webs in the CCZ region is the
presence of an oxygen minimum zone (OMZ), a region characterized
by particularly hypoxic conditions (to <1 µM)16. Oxygen gradients
influence the depth distribution of zooplankton and micronekton
Received: 7 March 2025
Accepted: 15 October 2025
Check for updates
1Department ofOceanography,University ofHawai?i atManoa, Honolulu, HI, USA. 2Department of Earth Sciences, University ofHawai?i atManoa, Honolulu,HI,
USA. 3These authors contributed equally: Victoria E. Assad, Alexus E. Cazares-Nuesser. e-mail: mdowd3@hawaii.edu
Nature Communications | (2025) 16:9575 1
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communities17,18, as biological adaptations to low oxygen create
species-specific habitat thresholds that determine where organisms
reside and feed19,20. In the mesopelagic, zooplankton biomass may
exhibit a modest increase in the lower oxycline (LO) in comparison to
the OMZ core18,21, however, highly mobile and migratory micronekton
(small fish, cephalopods, and crustacea, ~2?20 cm in size9 often reside
at these depths17,18.
Compound-specific isotope analysis of amino acids (CSIA-AA) can
identify the particle size fraction that forms the base of the food
web22,23, and it cancharacterize trophic structureof the community24,25.
Understanding the contribution of different particle size fractions to
the base of the food web is critical, as mining plumes will introduce
particles of varying abundance, nutritional content, and quality
depending on their size. This knowledge is essential for assessing the
potential impacts of midwater mining plumes on the faunal commu-
nity at depth.
In this study, we apply a Bayesian mixing model26 to isotopically
differentiate particle sources based on size and quantify their con-
tribution to the base of the food web. The goal of this study is to
characterize the trophic sources of the faunal food web at a proposed
lower mesopelagic discharge depth to evaluate how the introduction
of a midwater mining waste plume could disrupt it. We examine both
the composition of mining discharge plume material and the nutri-
tional quality at thebase of the foodweb, alongwith the trophicmodes
of the animals living there. This work provides a critical step towards
understanding the potential impacts of full-scale mining on the
mesopelagic community.
Results and discussion
During this study, we collected 3 types of particle samples: back-
ground, discharge, and plume samples in 3 size fractions, small
(0.7?6?m), medium (6?53?m), and large (>53?m) (Fig. 1). Back-
ground samples were collected at various depths (800?1500m) dur-
ing 3 cruises, either when no mining activity was occurring or at
locations and depths far from mining activity, ensuring that these
particles represent natural midwater particles. Discharge and plume
samples were collected in Fall 2022 during a small-scale test mining
operation. During this operation, a collector vehicle on the abyssal
seafloor collected sediments and nodules, which were brought to a
surface ship. The nodules were separated from abyssal sediments
onboard, and the effluent waste was released at ~1250m. This event
represented a rare opportunity to study midwater discharge asso-
ciated with deep-sea mining. Discharge particle samples consisted of
shipboard effluent waste collected after nodules were removed but
beforemidwater release. Plume particle samples were collected in situ
after the mining waste was discharged, using transmissometry to
measure turbidity and confirm that we were sampling within
the plume.
Background particle data were obtained as a proxy for the
potential base of the food web from previous cruises where particles,
zooplankton, and micronekton were collected. Isotopic analysis was
performed to characterize these particles for use in a mixingmodel to
identify the base of the food web. This approach allows us to evaluate
how the introduction of mining waste might affect the pelagic com-
munity in the future. Because plume generation lasted a maximum of
32 hours and no animal samples were collected during the Fall 2022
cruise, we lack direct data on the incorporation of plumematerial into
the food web.
We found that mining-associated particles were nutritionally
poor. Background particle amino acid concentrations were 4.7 ± 2.7,
41.1 ± 25.3, and 46.3 ± 34.7 ngN/?gPN for small, medium, and large
particles, respectively. In contrast, plumeanddischarge particle amino
acid concentrations were substantially lower at 3.8 ± 4.4, 1.7 ± 1.5, and
4.2 ± 4.7 ngN/?gPN (Fig. 1 and Table S1). There was no significant dif-
ference in amino acid concentration of small particles between
background and plume/discharge samples (p =0.663, one-way
ANOVA, Table S2). However, medium and large background particles
had significantly higher amino acid concentrations compared to
plume/discharge particles (pMedium = 0.028, pLarge = 0.035, one-way
ANOVA, Fig. 1 and Table S2). These findings indicate that the medium
and large particles in the plume were significantly depleted in amino
acid content relative to background material.
Background particle concentrations weremuch lower than plume
particle concentrations. During the Fall 2022 plume sampling, we used
a LISST (Laser In Situ Scattering and Transmissometry, LISST-DEEP,
Sequoia Scientific) mounted on the CTD rosette to measure in situ
particle concentration and size in 32 logarithmically spaced classes
centered between 1.36 and 230.14?m. As themedium and large plume
and discharge particle pools were significantly different in amino acid
content compared to background particles, samples were pooled into
small (0.7?6?m) and large (>6?m, medium+ large) size fractions for
this analysis. Background particle concentrations were 0.08 and
0.23?L/L for small and large size fractions, respectively, while plume
particle concentrations were 9.80 and 2.18?L/L for the same size
fractions (Fig. 2 and Table S3). Background particle counts were 0.014
and 0.003 × 108 particles/L for small and large size fractions,
Fig. 2 | LISSTparticle concentration. Plots of particle concentration fromLISST in
background casts (3 casts, black) and plume casts (5 casts) inA) 1.25?6 µm (yellow)
size fraction and B) 6?250 µm (green) size fraction. Data were binned to 1-db.
Source data are provided in Source data 2.
pSmall = 0.664
* pMedium = 0.026
* pLarge = 0.033
Fig. 1 | Total amino acid concentration in particles. Plot of the total amino acid
concentration normalized to PN content, measured in 0.7?6 µm (yellow), 6?53 µm
(pink), and >53 µm (green) size fractions of background particles (outliers
removed) andplumeparticles collected from in situfiltration collected from700 to
1250m. Also included are discharge particles collected aboard the test mining
vessel prior tominewaste being discharged at depth. P values shown are significant
differences in medium and large background and plume/discharge material from
one-way ANOVA (Table S2). Pictures show background particle filter (open arrow/
circles) and discharge/plume filters (closed arrow/circles). Source data are pro-
vided in Source data 1.
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respectively, compared to plume particle counts of 11.15 and
0.12 × 108 particles/L for small and large size fractions (Table S4).
Previous analyses of CCZ abyssal seafloor sediments suggest that
sedimentary particles range from <2 µm to 63 µm in size14. The plume
particle size distribution showed maxima between 2.6 and 4.3 µm
(Fig. S1). Visual analysis of plume samples corroborates this pattern,
showing an increase of small (0.7?6?m) particles in the plume com-
pared to the background. These particles were likely sedimentary in
nature due to its light brown color, while dark pulverized nodule
particles were observed in the 6?53?m size range (Fig. 1). It should be
noted that the ?plume? is not a well-defined entity but rather an area
where particle concentrations form a gradient exceeding background
levels (see Supplementary Note 1). Some parts of this plume may be
highly opaque, while others are only slightly turbid. Consequently, our
particle concentrations represent a point along the continuum of the
plume. The maximum particle concentration and count reflect the
extent of our sampling but may not necessarily represent the true
maximum within the plume itself.
To assess the potential impact of a plume on the faunal commu-
nity, it is first necessary to understand the current contribution of
particles as trophic sources to the base of the food web. Using ?15N
values of source and ?13C values of essential amino acids (see Sup-
plementary Note 2, Tables S5 and S6, and Fig. S2), we constructed a
Bayesian mixing model to estimate plausible ranges to consumers.
While diel vertical migration (DVM) is a common phenomenon and
occurs at this site, an epipelagic source was not included in themixing
model, a decision based on several considerations. First, the consumer
samples analyzed were collected during nighttime tows, meaning that
most individuals sampledwere likely non-migratory residents. Second,
only ~20% of the zooplankton biomass present below the OMZ in the
deep mesopelagic migrates to the upper ocean at night. Finally, the
micronekton taxa included in this analysis are non-migratory, so any
influence from an epipelagic DVM source from DVM should be
minimal.
We found that particles >6 µmmake up a significant proportion of
the base of the foodweb in lowermesopelagic and upper bathypelagic
depths below the OMZ (Fig. 3). Of the 46 animal samples collected
below the OMZ (700 to 1500m), these large particles accounted for at
least 50% of the food web trophic base in 30 samples. Specifically, at
the discharge depth (1000?1500m), 16 of the 26 animal samples had
large particles making up at least 50% of the food web base (Fig. 3,
Source Data 3). Overall, on an individual animal basis, 65% of con-
sumers relied on particles >6 µm for more than half of their food web
base.When grouped by zooplankton size fraction/micronekton taxa, 5
of the 8 groups showed a mean contribution of particles >6 µm
exceeding 50% (Fig. 3 and Table S7).
In sum, our mixing model indicates that large particles make a
substantial contribution to the base of the food web below the OMZ
(Fig. 3), a region expected to be impacted by mining waste plumes.
Furthermore, we found that large plume and discharge particles are
significantly lower in amino acid content (Fig. 1) and significantly
higher in concentration compared to background particles (Fig. 2).
This material would serve as the main food source for fauna, and the
reduced amino acid concentration of these particles is a key indicator
of their reduced nutritional value, leading to lower protein intake for
the same foraging effort. Together, these findings show that a mining
plume would drastically dilute the native particle supply for suspen-
sion feeders, replacing it with low nutritional quality seafloor sedi-
ments and inorganic fragmented nodules, which could inhibit the
ability of organisms to meet their metabolic demands by diluting the
relatively organic-rich native particles27,28. This alteration of the in situ
particle field has serious implications for the faunal community at the
depth of the proposed mining plume.
The breadth of impact of the midwater plume on pelagic food
webs is likely to be high based on our knowledge of the diversity and
trophic ecology of zooplankton andmicronekton below the OMZ. The
deep (700?1500m) zooplankton community contained 186 amplicon
sequence variants (ASVs) that were classified into 79 distinct taxa (e.g.,
genus, family) based onwhole-communitymetabarcoding (18S rDNA),
with 53% classified as particle feeders (proportions were nearly iden-
tical for just the discharge depth from 1000 to 1500m; Supplementary
Data 1). These taxa, including calanoid copepods, ostracods, and
oncaeid copepods rely on suspended particulate organic matter as a
primary food source29?32 and may be particularly vulnerable to resus-
pended sediments from mining plumes. Euphausiids and midwater
shrimp may also be impacted as they are known to opportunistically
consume detrital aggregates at depth33,34. In addition, gelatinous taxa
suchas siphonophores, tunicates, and scyphozoans accounted for 20%
of the taxa in this deep midwater community, increasing in relative
read abundance with depth. These organisms may be particularly
susceptible to plume-related impacts, as suspended particles can
adhere to their gelatinous bodies, clog feeding structures, disrupt
buoyancy, and increase mucous production and energy demands6,7
(zooplankton community analysis detailed further in Supplementary
Note 3: Functional Ecology Analysis, Zooplankton Functional Group
Results). Given the importance of particle-feeding and gelatinous taxa
at midwater depths, mining-induced plumes could significantly dis-
rupt zooplankton communities and trophic interactions, with
0.2-0.5 mm (5)
0.5-1.0 mm (6)
1.0-2.0 mm (7)
2.0-5.0 mm (6)
Acanthephyra
brevicarinata (6)
Cyclothone spp. (6)
Japatella spp. (7)
Eucopia spp. (2)
Fig. 3 | Mixing model particle contribution to base of food web. Plot of mixing
model mean contribution of small (green; 0.7?6 µm) and large (black; >6 µm) size
fractions to the trophic base of the food web for zooplankton (0.2?0.5, 0.5?1.0,
1.0?2.0, and 2.0?5.0mm size fractions) and micronekton taxa (A. brevicarinata,
Cyclothone spp., Japatella spp., and Eucopia spp.) from 700 to 1500m. Biological
replicate sample sizes are listed in parentheses. Error bars are standard deviation of
mean particle contribution. Eucopia spp. photo © Tammy Frank. Source data are
provided in Source data 3.
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cascading effects on micronekton and higher trophic level predators.
Indeed, we found 60% of 80 unique micronekton taxa from 700 to
1500m were zooplanktivores, 37.5% were pelagic micronektonivores
(feeding on smaller zooplanktivorous micronekton and occasionally
zooplankton), 1.25% were gelatinous zooplanktivores, and 1.25% were
pelagic generalists (proportions were nearly identical for just the dis-
charge depth from 1000 to 1500m; Supplementary Data 2). Further-
more, 85% of the density of micronekton within the discharge depth is
zooplanktivores (micronekton community analysis detailed further in
Supplementary Note 4). Specifically, among themicronekton sampled
for CSIA-AA, Cyclothone spp., Eucopia spp., and Japatella spp. are
zooplanktivores35,36, whereas Acanthephyra brevicarinata shrimps are
classified as pelagicmicronektonivores34,37. Overall, the results suggest
that the potential impacts on the zooplankton community due to
mining plumes could significantly diminish the primary food source
for micronekton, potentially leading to starvation or, for more mobile
micronekton, migration from the area.
Accurately identifying the scale of these food web effects is
challenging but essential to consider. Factors such as particle flow rate,
particle size, and concentration thresholds all significantly influence
the vertical and horizontal dispersion, and consequently, the volume
of water affected by the sediment discharge38,39. Depending on the
exact metrics applied, the scale of effect of the impact is estimated to
be on the order of 1000 s km3/yr38,39. Given the potential for multiple
simultaneous operations in the eastern CCZ, this represents con-
siderable environmental risk to these communities. They provide
essential ecosystem services, playing crucial roles in the biological
pump8,40, provisioning commercially harvested fishes6,9,41, and main-
taining a healthy, functioning ecosystem (Fig. 4).
There are potential options for mitigating the effects of the
plume, though each comes with its own risks. Discharging at a shal-
lower depth than the proposed discharge depth could result in similar
or worse impacts, because it would affect regions of the water column
with significantly higher biomass and important top predators18,21.
Releasing themining plume in the oxyclines above and below theOMZ
core, or within the OMZ core itself, could also be especially harmful.
Some zooplankton species are highly sensitive to small oxygen varia-
tions and adjust their vertical position to remainwithin their preferred
oxygen levels17,19,21. In low oxygen conditions (<10?M), changes in
zooplankton abundance have been linked to oxygen concentration
shifts of only a few micromolars21. This finely tuned behavior could be
disrupted by introducing an oxygenated midwater mining waste
plume into the oxyclines or within the OMZ core (see Supplementary
Note 1, Table S8 and Fig. S3). A number of zooplankton and micro-
nekton also vertically migrate within the top 1000m, potentially
expanding the zone of a plume?s influence18,19. Some larger nekton also
dive into these depths to forage42,43, although it should be noted that
this may be limited by the strong OMZ in this region. Discharging
below the current depth, into the deeper bathypelagic, remains largely
unstudied. Limited data suggest that while the bathypelagic is an area
of low abundance, it harbors high biodiversity, including species that
are distinct from the mesopelagic44,45. Furthermore, this community
may depend on large particles as the base of its food web, like the
processes observed from 700 to 1500m in this study. Introducing a
mining plume into this zone could therefore have comparable adverse
effects.
A final potential option is to return the sediment waste to the
seafloor. In the case of nodule mining, a seafloor sediment plume will
Fig. 4 | Summary of mining waste impact on the midwater food web.Mining-
generated waste plume has the potential to disrupt the midwater food web by
diluting the basal organic matter supply with low-quality organic matter-poor and
inorganic particles, with impacts propagating throughout the water column.
(Organisms and plume are not to scale.) Solid white arrows represent healthy food
web, dashed white arrows represent disrupted mining waste-impacted food web,
green vertical arrows represent verticalmigration. Dissolved oxygen concentration
in water column from calibratedCTD sensor. Image credit: AmandaMerrit (graphic
artist). Source data are provided in Source data 4.
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already be generated by the collector vehicle46. A few studies ofmining
tests suggest that this plume may behave as a turbidity flow, staying
within 10?s of meters of the seabed46,47. Introduction of the mining
wastematerial near the seabed could alter the dynamics of this plume,
requiring further study and modelling to evaluate its effects on dis-
persion. However, this approach may reduce the overall impact foot-
print by releasing one mining plume instead of two. Given our results
showing that a midwater release will disrupt whole food webs,
including those linked to seafood sources, bringing the discharge
plume back down to the seafloor may minimize environmental risks,
and we urge that it be considered.
In conclusion, this study provides empirical evidence that dis-
charge mining waste in midwaters is likely to disrupt midwater food
webs. The base of the zooplankton andmicronekton food webs at this
site, located below the OMZ, rely heavily on large particles (65% of
consumer samples). Approximately half of zooplankton taxa in this
community are particle feeders, employing suspension feeding or
detritivory, and their diets would be severely impacted by the intro-
duction of a midwater mining waste plume composed of similarly-
sized particles but of lower nutritional quality. Asmore than half of the
micronekton taxa in this community are zooplanktivores, the micro-
nekton community would also face severe disruption due to the
reduction or loss of their zooplankton food source. There are con-
firmed stress responses to sediment exposure in gelatinous plankton7,
and other risks such as suffocation and toxic metal exposure are also
possible. This unique and diverse faunal community is at significant
risk if full-scalemining proceeds (Fig. 4).Mitigation is possible through
careful selection of discharge depths bymining companies, combined
with regulation by national and international agencies.
Methods
Ethical guidelines
Vessels employed procedures for collection and combustion of trash
as standard to at-sea science research vessels to minimize dumping of
trash anddisturbance to the ecosystem.Waste disposal at sea followed
the internationally recognized standards included in the MARPOL
Annex IV and V regulations. All possible efforts were taken tominimize
disturbance to the environment.
All animal handling and samplingwere state-of-the-art andwere in
accordance with the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpe-
tologists ?Guidelines for Use of Fishes in Field Research.? To minimize
pain and stress in the captured animals, they were euthanized as soon
as possible after capture if they were still alive. Any that were alive but
not needed returned to the ocean as recommended by the ASIH
guidelines. The smallest number of animals was used to achieve sta-
tistical validity of isotopic analyses for food web analysis. All fishes
were collectedunderUH IACUCpermit 14-1934-9. UH IACUCapproved
this study protocol.
Study site
Samples were collected in the NORI-D mining claim in the Clarion-
Clipperton Zone (CCZ) during 3 cruises: DG5B in Spring (March?April)
2021, DG5C in Fall (October) 2021, and DG7B in Fall
(October?November) 2022. In 2021, samples were collected at two
sites: the Preservation Reference Zone (PRZ) and the Collector Test
Area (CTA). In 2022, sampling was conducted only at the CTA. This
study includes particle samples collected during all 3 cruises at both
sites, zooplankton sampleswere collected in Spring and Fall 2021 from
the CTA site, and micronekton were collected in Fall 2021 at the CTA.
Environmental data
Conductivity-temperature-depth (CTD) casts were conducted during
all cruises to measure temperature, salinity, transmissometry, and
dissolved oxygen concentrations. Oxygen sensors were calibrated
using Winkler oxygen titrations on seawater samples collected in
Niskin and GoFlo bottles. In situ particle abundance and size dis-
tributions were characterized using a LISST (LISST-DEEP, 650 nm,
Sequoia Scientific) for 32 logarithmically spaced classes centered
between 1.36 and 230.14?m, with bandwidths ranging from 0.22 to
38?m. Data were binned to 1db depth intervals and calibrated to the
particle minima using the deepest 10m of the cast.
Particle collection
Particulate matter was collected using in situ Large Volume Water
Transfer Systems (McLaneWTS-LV) pumps equippedwith tiered filters
onto pre-cleaned 0.7?m glass fiber filters, and 6?m and 53?m Nylon
or polyester screens to separate particles into 3 size fractions: small
(0.7?6?m), medium (6?53?m), and large (>53?m). Filters were sub-
sampled at sea immediately after the sampling cast for bulk and
compound-specific isotope analysis, wrapped individually in baked
(500 °C, 5 h) aluminum foil, and frozen at?80 °Cprior to analysis in the
lab (detailed further in Supplementary Note 5).
Background particle samples were collected in the lower meso-
pelagic (above theproposeddischargedepth andbelow theOMZcore;
800?1000m) and in the upper bathypelagic zone (1000?1500m).
Thirty one particle samples were collected from below the OMZ core
across all 3 cruises; however, only 21 samples (7 small, 7 medium, 7
large) possessed the full suite of amino acids andwere used as separate
sources in the model. Samples collected when no mining activity was
occurring or at locations and depths far from mining activity are
referred to as ?background samples? in the text. During the Fall 2022
cruise, a small-scale test mining operation was conducted5, generating
a midwater mine waste plume for up to 32h of sample collection.
Pumps were mounted on a rosette equipped with a CTD package (as
described above) and a LISST-DEEP to record real-time turbidity and
particle size distributions, aiding in plume identification. Tow-Yo casts
were performed while the pumps were active to maintain sampling
within the plume, approximately 300?1000m from the point of dis-
charge (detailed further in the Supplementary Notes 5 and 6). These
are referred to as ?plume samples? in the text. ?Discharge samples?
were collected aboard the testmining vessel prior tomine waste being
discharged at depth. The three same size-fractions of particles were
collected.
Zooplankton collection
Zooplankton were collected using a 1m2 Multiple Opening/Closing
Nets and Environmental Sensing System (MOCNESS) from 1500m to
the sea surface. Samples were collected from 9 depth-stratified nets,
targeting depths below the OMZ core in the LO and suboxycline (SO)
of 1500?1250m, 1250?1000m, 1000?800m, and 800?700m. Bulk
zooplankton was split quantitatively at sea using a Folsom plankton
splitter and fractions preserved for isotope and metabarcoding ana-
lyses. A ? fraction was separated into 5 size fractions, 0.2?0.5mm,
0.5?1.0mm, 1.0?2.0mm, 2.0?5.0mm, and >5mm, and stored at
?80 °C. These samples were weighed, lyophilized, ground, and stored
at ?20 °C until stable isotope analysis. In total, 24 zooplankton sam-
ples, collected from below the OMZ core in Spring and Fall 2021, were
used for isotopic analysis. A ?-? fraction was preserved in RNAlater,
stored at?80 °C, and analyzed by communitymetabarcoding to assess
zooplankton diversity and community composition. A ~365-bp frag-
ment of the V1-V2 region of nuclear 18S rRNA was PCR amplified for
these analyses, with reads classified using a Naïve-Bayes Classifier in
Qiime248 using multiple reference databases (detailed further in Sup-
plementary Note 3: DNA Extraction, Amplification, and Sequencing,
Bioinformatics; Supplementary Data 3).
Micronekton collection
Micronekton were collected using a 10m2 MOCNESS equipped with
3mm mesh nets, sampling from 1500m to the sea surface. Samples
were collected from5 depth-stratified nets, targeting depths below the
Article https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-65411-w
Nature Communications | (2025) 16:9575 5
www.nature.com/naturecommunications
OMZ core in the LO and SO of 1500?1000m and 1000?700m. In the
field, micronekton were individually sorted to family level, then
transported to the lab for further identification to the lowest taxo-
nomic unit possible, often to species level, prior to analysis. Specific
micronekton taxa analyzed included Acanthephyra brevicarinata,
caridean shrimp, Cyclothone spp. fish, Japatella spp. octopod, and
Eucopia spp. mysid shrimp. These taxa were selected as abundant
representatives collected in both the LO and SO. In total, 21 micro-
nekton samples frombelow theOMZcore in Fall 2021were analyzed in
this study.
Stable isotope analysis
Samples for stable isotope analysis were processed using routine
procedures25,49. Bulk isotope samples were packed into tin capsules
and processed using a Costech ECS 2010 Elemental Combustion Sys-
tem coupled to a ThermoFinnigan Delta Plus XP or Thermo Scientific
Delta V Advantage via a Thermo Scientific Conflo IV. Reference mate-
rial (characterized glycine standard and characterized in-house tuna
white muscle tissue) was analyzed every 6?12 samples, and the cor-
responding response factor (ratio of nitrogen peak area, in volt-sec-
onds, to nitrogen reference size, Vs [?g PN]-1) of the referencematerial
was used to determine the particulate nitrogen (PN) concentration (?g
N-PN) of samples.
ForCSIA-AA, sampleswerehydrolyzedusing 6Nhydrochloric acid
and purified using cation exchange chromatography. Samples
were esterified with isopropanol and trifluoracetic acid (TFAA) and
then further purified with liquid-liquid extraction using a phosphate
buffer: chloroformmixture. Samples were stored in a dichlormethane-
TFAA solution at ?20 °C and transferred into ethyl acetate before
analysis.
Nitrogen isotopic composition was measured using a Thermo
Scientific Delta V Plus IRMS interfaced to a Trace gas chromatograph.
Internal references L-2-aminoadipic acid (AAA) and L-(+)-norleucine
(NOR)with known?15N valueswere co-injectedwith each sample, and a
reference suite of 14 pure amino acids with known ?15N values was co-
injectedwith NOR and AAA every 2?4 sample runs. The corresponding
response factors (ratio of AA peak area, in volt-seconds, to AA refer-
encesize, Vs [nmolAA]?1) of the referencesuitewereused todetermine
AA concentration (ng N-AA) of samples. Samples were measured in
triplicate when enough material was available.
Total amino acid concentration (as presented in Fig. 1) was cal-
culated by summing the individual amino acid concentrations from
CSIA-AA divided by total nitrogen concentration from bulk analysis. A
known subsample of the total filter was split for bulk and CSIA-AA, the
response factor of the reference material (in either method) was then
used to calculate the concentration of the sample analyzed. The sub-
sample percentage (e.g. ? for bulk analysis, ? for CSIA-AA) was used
to calculate total carbon and nitrogen contents within the sample.
Total amino acid content (CSIA-AA, ng N-AA) was normalized to total
nitrogen content (Bulk, ?g N-PN) in order to compare results between
samples.
Carbon isotopic composition of AA was measured using a MAT
253 IRMS interfaced with a Trace GCUltra. Internal isotopic references
AAA, NOR, and an n-C20 alkane were co-injectedwith each sample, and
a reference suite of 14 pure amino acidswith known?13C valueswas co-
injected with NOR and AA every 2-4 samples.
Data analysis
The suite of AA?s used as tracers in this mixing model was selected by
iterative statistical tests. First, AA?s missing from at least 4 samples per
size fraction were excluded. Second, AA?s that showed no significant
difference between particle size fraction as determined by one-way
ANOVA were also excluded. This process resulted in the selection of
two nitrogen source amino acids (phenylalanine [Phe] and lysine [Lys])
and one carbon essential amino acid (EAA, leucine [Leu]). Within a
particle size fraction, there was no difference between site, cruise, or
depth as determined by way of Pairwise PERMANOVA.
The base of the food web was analyzed using a Bayesian isotope
mixing model using the package runjags (version 2.2.2-4)26 in R (ver-
sion4.2.2)50withdirichletReg (0.7-1)51. Three sampling chainswere run,
each containing 100,000 steps after a 50,000-step adaptation,
40,000-step burn-in, and thinning factor of 50, using an ?unin-
formative?/generalist prior. This mixing model uses ?15NPhe, ?
15NLys,
and ?13CLeu values as tracers. Since these selected amino acids serve as
source and essential amino acids, they can be considered non-
fractionating during trophic transfer52,53. The model assesses the 3
particle size fractions as potential sources that best matched the
consumer isotope profile (Source Data 5). Animal samples were run
through the model individually by size fraction/taxa (Supplementary
Data 4). Given that the amino acid concentrations of the medium and
large size fraction plume samples were distinct from the background
material, these size fractions were pooled post-modeling to evaluate
theirmean contribution to the base of the foodweb (Tables S1 and S2).
Statistical analyses were conducted in R (version 4.2.2)50, using
MASS (version 7.3-58.1)54, pairwiseAdonis (version 0.4.1)55, and vegan
(version 2.6-4)56. Plots were generated with gglopt2 (version 3.5.1)57.
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature
Portfolio Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Data availability
All isotopic, Bayesian mixing model, and LISST data generated in this
study are publicly available via GitHub and linked to Zenodo (https://
github.com/mdowd3/Mining-FoodWeb-CSIA)58. Zooplankton
sequence data are available in the NCBI Sequence Read Archive under
BioProject PRJNA1254332 and SRA accession numbers SRR33375556 to
SRR33375942. Isotopic, Bayesianmixingmodel, and LISST source data
generated in this study are provided in Source Data 1?7. Zooplankton
and micronekton functional ecology data generated in this study are
provided in Supplementary Data 1?2. Zooplankton sequence data
generated in this study are provided in Supplementary Data 3. Baye-
sian consumer data generated in this study are provided in Supple-
mentary Data 4. Source data are provided with this paper.
Code availability
Allmodel code and dependencies are publicly available via GitHub and
linked to Zenodo (https://github.com/mdowd3/Mining-FoodWeb-
CSIA)58. Bayesian mixing model code (including a readme instruction
file, input data, and expected output data) generated in this study is
provided in Supplementary Code 1.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Natalie Wallsgrove for assistance in isotope analyses and all
cruise science teams for assistance at sea. Amanda Merrit designed and
illustrated Fig. 4. All authors received support fromTheMetalsCompany
Inc. (TMC) through its subsidiary Nauru Ocean Resources Inc. (NORI).
NORI holds exploration rights to the NORI-D contract area in the CCZ,
regulated by the International Seabed Authority and sponsored by the
government of Nauru. This is contribution TMC/NORI/D/022 and School
of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology contribution number
11,945. All fish were collected under UH IACUC permit 14-1934-9.
Author contributions
J.C.D., E.G., A.E.W., and B.N.P designed research. M.H.D., V.E.A., A.E.C.,
J.C.D., E.G., A.E.W., and B.N.P performed research and analyzed data.
M.H.D. wrote paper with V.E.A., A.E.C., J.C.D., E.G., A.E.W., and B.N.P.
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Supplementary information The online version contains
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https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-65411-w.
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Michael H. Dowd.
Peer review information Nature Communications thanks Ana Colaço
and the other anonymous, reviewer(s) for their contribution to the peer
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Deep-sea mining discharge can disrupt midwater food webs
Results and discussion
Methods
Ethical guidelines
Study site
Environmental data
Particle collection
Zooplankton collection
Micronekton collection
Stable isotope analysis
Data analysis
Reporting summary
Data availability
Code availability
References
Acknowledgements
Author contributions
Competing interests
Additional information