Assessing proxy signatures of temperature, salinity, and hypoxia in the Baltic Sea through foraminifera-based geochemistry and faunal assemblages
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Published:2018-09-07
Issue:2
Volume:37
Page:403-429
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ISSN:2041-4978
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Container-title:Journal of Micropalaeontology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J. Micropalaeontol.
Author:
Groeneveld JeroenORCID, Filipsson Helena L.ORCID, Austin William E. N.ORCID, Darling Kate, McCarthy David, Quintana Krupinski Nadine B.ORCID, Bird ClareORCID, Schweizer Magali
Abstract
Abstract. Current climate and environmental changes strongly affect shallow marine and coastal
areas like the Baltic Sea. This has created a need for a context to
understand the severity and potential outcomes of such changes. The context
can be derived from paleoenvironmental records during periods when comparable
events happened in the past. In this study, we explore how varying bottom
water conditions across a large hydrographic gradient in the Baltic Sea
affect benthic foraminiferal faunal assemblages and the geochemical
composition of their calcite tests. We have conducted both morphological and
molecular analyses of the faunas and we evaluate how the chemical signatures
of the bottom waters are recorded in the tests of several species of benthic
foraminifera. We focus on two locations, one in the Kattegat (western Baltic
Sea) and one in Hanö Bay (southern Baltic Sea). We show that seawater
Mn∕Ca, Mg∕Ca, and Ba∕Ca
(Mn∕Casw, Mg∕Casw, and Ba∕Casw)
variations are mainly controlled by dissolved oxygen concentration and
salinity. Their respective imprints on the foraminiferal calcite demonstrate
the potential of Mn∕Ca as a proxy for hypoxic conditions, and Ba∕Ca as a
proxy for salinity in enclosed basins such as the Baltic Sea. The traditional
use of Mg∕Ca as a proxy to reconstruct past seawater temperatures is not
recommended in the region, as it may be overprinted by the large variations
in salinity (specifically on Bulimina marginata), Mg∕Casw, and
possibly also the carbonate system. Salinity is the main factor controlling
the faunal assemblages: a much more diverse fauna occurs in the higher-salinity (∼32) Kattegat than in the low-salinity
(∼15) Hanö Bay. Molecular identification shows that only
Elphidium clavatum occurs at both locations, but other genetic types
of both genera Elphidium and Ammonia are restricted to
either low- or high-salinity locations. The combination of foraminiferal
geochemistry and environmental parameters demonstrates that in a highly
variable setting like the Baltic Sea, it is possible to separate different
environmental impacts on the foraminiferal assemblages and therefore use
Mn∕Ca, Mg∕Ca, and Ba∕Ca to reconstruct how specific conditions may have
varied in the past.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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