Significance of Halimeda bioherms to the global carbonate budget based on a geological sediment budget for the Northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Since the correlation between carbon dioxide (CO2) levels and global temperatures was established in the ice core records, quantifying the components of the global carbon cycle has become a priority with a view to constraining models of the climate system. The marine carbonate budget is still not ad...
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ftanucanberra:oai:digitalcollections.anu.edu.au:1885/53116 2023-05-15T16:39:14+02:00 Significance of Halimeda bioherms to the global carbonate budget based on a geological sediment budget for the Northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia Rees, Siwan Opdyke, Bradley Wilson, P.A. Henstock, T J 2015-12-10T22:24:07Z http://hdl.handle.net/1885/53116 unknown Springer 0722-4028 http://hdl.handle.net/1885/53116 Coral Reefs Keywords: bioherm calcareous alga calcium carbonate carbon cycle carbon dioxide coral reef green alga Holocene nutrient budget sediment budget Australasia Australia Coral Sea Great Barrier Reef Pacific Ocean Queensland Anthozoa Chlorophyta Halimed Calcium carbonate budget Halimeda bioherms Journal article 2015 ftanucanberra 2015-12-28T23:28:07Z Since the correlation between carbon dioxide (CO2) levels and global temperatures was established in the ice core records, quantifying the components of the global carbon cycle has become a priority with a view to constraining models of the climate system. The marine carbonate budget is still not adequately constrained and the quantitative significance of the calcareous green alga Halimeda still remains particularly poorly understood. Previously, it has been suggested that Halimeda bioherms on the shelf of the Great Barrier Reef may contain a volume of carbonate equal to or greater than that contained within the shelf edge coral reefs. This study uses published datasets to test this hypothesis in the Northern Great Barrier Reef (NGBR) province. It is estimated that Halimeda bioherms on the outer shelf of the NGBR contain at least as much (and up to four times more) CaCO3 sediment as the adjacent ribbon reef facies. Globally, if these findings are even only partially applicable, the contribution of shallow water carbonate sediments to the global carbon budget based on coral reefs alone is currently substantially underestimated. Article in Journal/Newspaper ice core Australian National University: ANU Digital Collections Pacific Queensland |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Australian National University: ANU Digital Collections |
op_collection_id |
ftanucanberra |
language |
unknown |
topic |
Keywords: bioherm calcareous alga calcium carbonate carbon cycle carbon dioxide coral reef green alga Holocene nutrient budget sediment budget Australasia Australia Coral Sea Great Barrier Reef Pacific Ocean Queensland Anthozoa Chlorophyta Halimed Calcium carbonate budget Halimeda bioherms |
spellingShingle |
Keywords: bioherm calcareous alga calcium carbonate carbon cycle carbon dioxide coral reef green alga Holocene nutrient budget sediment budget Australasia Australia Coral Sea Great Barrier Reef Pacific Ocean Queensland Anthozoa Chlorophyta Halimed Calcium carbonate budget Halimeda bioherms Rees, Siwan Opdyke, Bradley Wilson, P.A. Henstock, T J Significance of Halimeda bioherms to the global carbonate budget based on a geological sediment budget for the Northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia |
topic_facet |
Keywords: bioherm calcareous alga calcium carbonate carbon cycle carbon dioxide coral reef green alga Holocene nutrient budget sediment budget Australasia Australia Coral Sea Great Barrier Reef Pacific Ocean Queensland Anthozoa Chlorophyta Halimed Calcium carbonate budget Halimeda bioherms |
description |
Since the correlation between carbon dioxide (CO2) levels and global temperatures was established in the ice core records, quantifying the components of the global carbon cycle has become a priority with a view to constraining models of the climate system. The marine carbonate budget is still not adequately constrained and the quantitative significance of the calcareous green alga Halimeda still remains particularly poorly understood. Previously, it has been suggested that Halimeda bioherms on the shelf of the Great Barrier Reef may contain a volume of carbonate equal to or greater than that contained within the shelf edge coral reefs. This study uses published datasets to test this hypothesis in the Northern Great Barrier Reef (NGBR) province. It is estimated that Halimeda bioherms on the outer shelf of the NGBR contain at least as much (and up to four times more) CaCO3 sediment as the adjacent ribbon reef facies. Globally, if these findings are even only partially applicable, the contribution of shallow water carbonate sediments to the global carbon budget based on coral reefs alone is currently substantially underestimated. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Rees, Siwan Opdyke, Bradley Wilson, P.A. Henstock, T J |
author_facet |
Rees, Siwan Opdyke, Bradley Wilson, P.A. Henstock, T J |
author_sort |
Rees, Siwan |
title |
Significance of Halimeda bioherms to the global carbonate budget based on a geological sediment budget for the Northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia |
title_short |
Significance of Halimeda bioherms to the global carbonate budget based on a geological sediment budget for the Northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia |
title_full |
Significance of Halimeda bioherms to the global carbonate budget based on a geological sediment budget for the Northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia |
title_fullStr |
Significance of Halimeda bioherms to the global carbonate budget based on a geological sediment budget for the Northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Significance of Halimeda bioherms to the global carbonate budget based on a geological sediment budget for the Northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia |
title_sort |
significance of halimeda bioherms to the global carbonate budget based on a geological sediment budget for the northern great barrier reef, australia |
publisher |
Springer |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1885/53116 |
geographic |
Pacific Queensland |
geographic_facet |
Pacific Queensland |
genre |
ice core |
genre_facet |
ice core |
op_source |
Coral Reefs |
op_relation |
0722-4028 http://hdl.handle.net/1885/53116 |
_version_ |
1766029572290117632 |