Correlative geochemical imaging of Desmophyllum dianthus reveals biomineralisation strategy as a key coral vital effect

Author:

Standish Christopher D.,Trend Jacob,Kleboe Jacob,Chalk Thomas B.,Mahajan Sumeet,Milton J. Andy,Page Tessa M.,Robinson Laura F.,Stewart Joseph A.,Foster Gavin L.

Abstract

AbstractThe chemical and isotopic composition of stony coral skeletons form an important archive of past climate. However, these reconstructions are largely based on empirical relationships often complicated by “vital effects” arising from uncertain physiological processes of the coral holobiont. The skeletons of deep-sea corals, such as Desmophyllum dianthus, are characterised by micron-scale or larger geochemical heterogeneity associated with: (1) centres of calcification (COCs) where nucleation of new skeleton begins, and (2) fibres that thicken the skeleton. These features are difficult to sample cleanly using traditional techniques, resulting in uncertainty surrounding both the causes of geochemical differences and their influence on environmental signals. Here we combine optical, and in-situ chemical and isotopic, imaging tools across a range of spatial resolutions (~ 100 nm to 10 s of μm) in a correlative multimodal imaging (CMI) approach to isolate the microstructural geochemistry of each component. This reveals COCs are characterised by higher organic content, Mg, Li and Sr and lower U, B and δ11B compared to fibres, reflecting the contrasting biomineralisation mechanisms employed to construct each feature. CMI is rarely applied in Environmental/Earth Sciences, but here we illustrate the power of this approach to unpick the “vital effects” in D. dianthus, and by extension, other scleractinian corals.

Funder

European Research Council

University of Southampton

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

NERC

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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