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Benthic foraminiferal stable carbon isotopes as a proxy for organic matter fluxes to the sea floor

Subject Area Palaeontology
Term from 2014 to 2018
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 251044754
 
Final Report Year 2017

Final Report Abstract

The stable carbon isotope composition of benthic foraminiferal tests contains a wide range of environmental and biological information. Although δ13C is commonly used in paleoceanographic studies our knowledge on its inter- and intraspecific variability is still insufficient. In the frame of the project we have studied the stable carbon and oxygen isotope composition of live (Rose Bengal stained) and dead (unstained) tests of selected benthic foraminiferal species from different microhabitats and regions of the Mediterranean Sea covering a wide range of trophic conditions and related isotopic pore water gradients. We observed up to -2.3 ‰ lower δ13C values with increasing living depth within the sediment, reflecting the pore-water gradient δ13CDICof dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC). Ontogenetic shifts towards higher δ13C and δ18O ratios with increasing test sizes of 1.2 and 1.3 ‰, respectively, were observed in buliminid (Globobulimina spp., Uvigerina spp.), but not in rotaliid taxa (Lobatula lobatula, Cibicidoides pachydermus, Melonis barleeanum). Uvigerina peregrina revealed a strong metabolic fractionation for small tests, suppressing the pore water signal towards more negative ratios. In contrast, the likewise shallow infaunal Uvigerina mediterranea appears to be less biologically influenced and reflects the more eutrophic conditions of the Alboran Sea by a general shift of the ontogenetic function towards lower δ13C values. The Δδ13CUmed-Epi and the Corg flux data showed a good correlation for open marine sites (Alboran Sea, Mallorca Channel, Strait of Sicily, Southern Aegean Sea), while the Corg supply is underestimated for regions influenced by lateral organic matter fluxes, due to intense resuspension (Canyons at the Gulf of Lions, isolated basins in the Northern and Central Aegean Sea). Considering these local biases, a first transfer function for Corg fluxes based on the stable carbon isotope differences of benthic foraminifera could be established. This transfer function was then applied to down-core δ13C records from the Strait of Sicily and the Ligurian Sea. Generally enhanced food fluxes by about 5 gC m^-2 a^-1 and 8.5 gC m-2 a^-1 were reconstructed for the Last Glacial Maximum in the Strait of Sicily and the Ligurian Sea, respectively. The open-ocean setting of the Strait of Sicily revealed long-term trophic changes for the past 23 kyr. In contrast, the more proximal location of the Ligurian Sea in the vicinity of the Alps revealed a stronger millennial-scale trophic variability suggesting the influence of short-term climate changes on the local vertical and lateral Corg fluxes. Although the applicability of the transfer function is hampered in environments with low dissolved oxygen concentrations and enhanced lateral Corg fluxes, species-specific δ13CFor deviations appear a useful proxy for quantitative paleoceanographic reconstructions.

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