7 research outputs found
Studies in living and fossil foraminifers from seasonally productive regions
Paleoecological and paleoenvironmental analysis of benthic and planktonic
foraminiferal associations from sediments from the northern Adriatic Sea, the Kau
Basin (Halmahera) and the Molucca Sea shed new light on the way in which various
environmental factors influence foraminiferal distribution patterns. The qualitative
and quantitative analyses on the faunas from these areas are presented and the
results discussed in eight separate papers, compiled as chapters 1 - 8 of this thesis.
In a series of three papers on the seasonally productive northern Adriatic
Sea (chapters 2-4), the influence of oxygenation and food supply on the size and
composition of benthic foraminiferal communities is emphasized. The paper on
benthic foraminiferal microhabitat selection (chapter 2) shows that three categories
of species can be distinguished on the basis of their vertical distribution patterns
in the sediment. These categories include epifaunal, predominantly infaunal and
potentially infaunal groups of taxa; the habitat selection appears to be closely
related to the degree of oxygenation of the sea-bottom environment.
From the distribution of living benthic foraminifera in fourteen sample
stations in the northern Adriatic Sea (chapter 3) it is concluded that the downward
organic flux is the most important factor determining the overall distribution
patterns. This flux controls the complex relation between food and oxygen
availability in the benthic environment.
Chapter 4 deals with a study on the benthic foraminiferal record
documenting the eutrophication history of the northern Adriatic Sea during the last
160 years. Three time-successive changes in benthic foraminiferal assemblages can
be attributed to the impact of man-induced changes in sedimentation rates, food
and oxygen availability in front of the Po delta. Anoxic, pollution-related events
occurred with increasing frequency since 1960, whereas the effects these events
had became even more from about 1980 onwards.
The two papers on the Kau Basin, Halmahera (chapters 5 and 6) give a
detailed account of its environmental evolution since the latest Pleistocene. Kau
Basin, which was a freshwater lake during the last glacial maximum, became
reconnected with the open ocean about 10 ka SP, due to the sea level rise at the
Pleistocene - Holocene transition. Dysoxic bottom conditions prevailed throughout
the Holocene. The surface waters were homothermal over the last 8 ka, as evidenced
by the composition of the low-diversity planktonic associations. Changes
in surface water productivity were most probably related to variations in river
discharge. Palynological, planktonic foraminiferal and stable isotope data from a
piston core off Halmahera are used to reconstruct glacial! interglacial contrasts in
the northern Molucca Sea (chapter 7). The inferred environmental changes are
interpreted in terms of changes in monsoonal circulation, lapse rate, and water
exchange between the Pacific and Indian Oceans. It is concluded that the glacial
climate was drier than today and that surface water temperatures were between
oand 2.5° C lower than at present.
In chapter 8, where benthic foraminiferal assemblages from food- enriched
areas are discussed, fluctuations in relative numbers of groups of opportunistic inand
epifauna from the Holocene of the Kau Basin are explained by applying the
microhabitat model established for the northern Adriatic Sea. It is shown that the
temporal and spatial relationships between the benthic faunas mainly mirror the
effects of changes in oxygenation of the bottom environments, which, in turn, can
be related to the Holocene climatic evolutio
Water masses in Kangerlussuaq, a large fjord in West Greenland: the processes of formation and the associated foraminiferal fauna
The water masses in Kangerlussuaq (Søndre Strømfjord) in West Greenland were studied during both a summer and a winter field survey. In order to obtain an improved understanding of the relationship between the physical oceanography and modern foraminiferal assemblage distributions, conductivity–temperature–density measurements were carried out in connection with sediment surface sampling along a transect through the 180 km long fjord. The exchange between the inner part of Kangerlussuaq (275 m deep) and the ocean is restricted by an almost 100 km long outer, shallow part. Our study shows that the water mass in this inner part is almost decoupled from the open ocean, and that in winter the inner part of the fjord is ice covered and convection occurs as a result of brine release. These processes are reflected in the foraminiferal assemblage, which consists of a sparse agglutinated fauna, indicative of carbonate dissolution. A monospecific, calcareous assemblage (Elphidium excavatum forma clavata) occurs in the innermost, shallow part, which is strongly influenced by sediment-loaded meltwater during the summer. The outer, shallow part of the fjord is dominated by strong tidal mixing, and in summer the density of the incoming water does not exceed the bottom water density in the inner fjord. The foraminiferal assemblage here reflects high bottom water current velocity and an influence of water with relatively high salinity. Kangerlussuaq can be regarded as a modern analogue for ice-proximal environments in the Quaternary, with a strong seasonal forcing caused by freshwater run-off and sea-ice formation