Abstract
ABSTRACTA lack of temporal context for paleoecological data from molluscan death assemblages (DAs) makes integrating them with monitoring data from living communities to inform habitat management difficult. Here we illustrate this challenge by documenting the spatial and stratigraphic variability in age and time-averaging of oyster reef death assemblages. We radiocarbon dated a total of 573 oyster shells from samples of two burial depths on 28 oyster reefs around Florida and found 1) that spatial and stratigraphic variability in DA sample ages and time-averaging are of similar magnitude, and 2) that the shallow oyster reef DAs are among the youngest and highest-resolution molluscan DAs documented to-date, with most having time-averaging estimates of decades or less. This information increases the potential usefulness of the DAs for habitat management because measured indicators can be placed in temporal context relative to monitoring data. More broadly, the results highlight the potential to obtain decadal-scale resolution from oyster bioherms in the fossil record.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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