Benthic Foraminiferal Assemblages from the Laurentian Channel in the Lower Estuary and Gulf of ST. Lawrence, Eastern Canada: Tracers of Bottom-Water Hypoxia

Author:

Audet Tiffany1,de Vernal Anne1,Mucci Alfonso2,Seidenkrantz Marit-Solveig3,Hillaire-Marcel Claude1,Carnero-Bravo Vladislav4,Gélinas Yves5

Affiliation:

1. 1 Département des Sciences de la Terre et de l'Atmosphère and Geotop-UQAM C.P. 8888, succ. Centre-ville, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3C 3P8

2. 2 Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences and Geotop-McGill, 3450 University St., Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 0E8

3. 3 Department of Geoscience, Aarhus University, Høegh-Guldbergs Gade 2, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark

4. 4 Instituto de Ecología, Universidad del Mar, Campus Puerto Ángel, Puerto Ángel, Oaxaca, México

5. 5 Geotop and Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke St. W. Montreal, Quebec, Canada H4B 1R6

Abstract

ABSTRACT Over the past century, an increase in temperatures and a decrease in dissolved oxygen concentrations have been observed in the bottom waters of the Laurentian Channel (LC), throughout the Lower St. Lawrence Estuary (LSLE) and the Gulf of St. Lawrence (GSL), eastern Canada. To document the impact of these changes, we analyzed the benthic foraminiferal assemblages and geochemical signatures of four sediment cores taken in the LC. Radiometric measurements (210Pb, 226Ra, 137Cs) indicate that the studied cores encompass the last 50 years of sedimentation in the LSLE and the last ∼160 years in the GSL. The sedimentary record shows a 60 to 65% decrease in benthic foraminiferal taxonomic diversity in the LC since the 1960s. An accelerated change in the foraminiferal assemblages is observed at approximately the same time at all studied sites, around the late 1990s and the early 2000s, towards populations dominated by the hypoxia-tolerant indicator taxa Brizalina subaenariensis, Eubuliminella exilis, and Globobulimina auriculata. This evolution of assemblages reflects incursions of the hypoxic zone into the western GSL over the last decades. The results of our multivariate analyses highlight the potential of benthic foraminiferal assemblages as a proxy of bottom-water hypoxia.

Publisher

Cushman Foundation for Foraminiferal Research

Subject

Paleontology,Microbiology

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