Abstract
Abstract. The adaptation of some benthic foraminiferal species to low-oxygen conditions
provides the prospect of using the chemical composition of their tests as
proxies for bottom water oxygenation. Manganese may be particularly suitable
as such a geochemical proxy because this redox element is soluble in reduced
form (Mn2+) and hence can be incorporated into benthic
foraminiferal tests under low-oxygen conditions. Therefore, intra- and
inter-test differences in foraminiferal Mn∕Ca ratios may hold
important information about short-term variability in pore water
Mn2+ concentrations and sediment redox conditions. Here, we studied
Mn∕Ca intra- and inter-test variability in living individuals
of the shallow infaunal foraminifer Ammonia tepida sampled in Lake Grevelingen (the Netherlands) in three different months of 2012. The deeper parts of this lake are
characterized by seasonal hypoxia/anoxia with associated shifts in microbial
activity and sediment geochemistry, leading to seasonal Mn2+
accumulation in the pore water. Earlier laboratory experiments with similar
seawater Mn2+ concentrations as encountered in the pore waters of
Lake Grevelingen suggest that intra-test variability due to ontogenetic
trends (i.e. size-related effects) and/or other vital effects occurring
during calcification in A. tepida (11–25 % relative SD, RSD) is responsible
for part of the observed variability in Mn∕Ca. Our present
results show that the seasonally highly dynamic environmental conditions in
the study area lead to a strongly increased Mn∕Ca intra- and
inter-test variability (average of 45 % RSD). Within single specimens,
both increasing and decreasing trends in Mn∕Ca ratios with
size are observed. Our results suggest that the variability in successive
single-chamber Mn∕Ca ratios reflects the temporal variability in pore water Mn2+. Additionally, active or passive migration of
the foraminifera in the surface sediment may explain part of the observed
Mn∕Ca variability.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
24 articles.
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