Monsoonal forcing of cold-water coral growth off southeastern Brazil during the past 160 kyr
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Published:2020-12-01
Issue:23
Volume:17
Page:5883-5908
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Bahr André, Doubrawa MonikaORCID, Titschack Jürgen, Austermann GregorORCID, Koutsodendris Andreas, Nürnberg Dirk, Albuquerque Ana LuizaORCID, Friedrich OliverORCID, Raddatz Jacek
Abstract
Abstract. Cold-water corals (CWCs) constitute important deep-water ecosystems
that are under increasing environmental pressure due to ocean acidification
and global warming. The sensitivity of these deep-water ecosystems to
environmental change is demonstrated by abundant paleorecords drilled
through CWC mounds that reveal characteristic alterations between rapid
formation and dormant or erosive phases. Previous studies have identified
several central parameters for driving or inhibiting CWC growth such as food
supply, oxygenation, and the carbon saturation state of bottom water, yet
there are still large uncertainties about the relative importance of the
different environmental parameters. To advance this debate we have performed
a multiproxy study on a sediment core retrieved from the 25 m high Bowie
Mound, located at 866 m water depth on the continental slope off
southeastern Brazil, a structure built up mainly by the CWC Solenosmilia variabilis. Our results
indicate a multifactorial control on CWC growth at Bowie Mound during the
past ∼ 160 kyr, which reveals distinct formation pulses
during northern high-latitude glacial cold events (Heinrich stadials, HSs)
largely associated with anomalously strong monsoonal rainfall over the
continent. The ensuing enhanced runoff elevated the terrigenous nutrient
and organic-matter supply to the continental margin and likely boosted
marine productivity. The dispersal of food particles towards the CWC
colonies during HSs was facilitated by the highly dynamic hydraulic
conditions along the continental slope that prevailed throughout glacial
periods. These conditions caused the emplacement of a pronounced nepheloid
layer above Bowie Mound, thereby aiding the concentration and along-slope
dispersal of organic matter. Our study thus emphasizes the impact of
continental climate variability on a highly vulnerable deep-marine
ecosystem.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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