Affiliation:
1. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA, USA
2. Department of Marine Biology, University of Jordan, Aqaba Branch, Jordan
Abstract
The health of reef-building corals has declined due to climate change and pollution. However, less is known about whether giant clams, reef-dwelling bivalves with a photosymbiotic partnership similar to that found in reef-building corals, are also threatened by environmental degradation. To compare giant clam health against a prehistoric baseline, we collected fossil and modern
Tridacna
shells from the Gulf of Aqaba, Northern Red Sea. After calibrating daily/twice-daily growth lines from the outer shell layer, we determined that modern individuals of all three species (
Tridacna maxima
,
T. squamosa
and
T. squamosina
) grew faster than Holocene and Pleistocene specimens. Modern specimens also show median shell organic δ
15
N values 4.2‰ lower than fossil specimens, which we propose is most likely due to increased deposition of isotopically light nitrate aerosols in the modern era. Nitrate fertilization accelerates growth in cultured
Tridacna
, so nitrate aerosol deposition may contribute to faster growth in modern wild populations. Furthermore, colder winter temperatures and past summer monsoons may have depressed fossil giant clam growth. Giant clams can serve as sentinels of reef environmental change, both to determine their individual health and the health of the reefs they inhabit.
Funder
Casey Moore Foundation
AMNH Lerner-Grey Foundation
NSF Coastal IRES Program
Zuckerman Foundation
Myers Oceanographic Trust
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
8 articles.
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