FORAMINIFERAL POPULATIONS AND MARINE MARSH PROCESSES’

Low marsh and high marsh foraminifera1 populations are related to mean tide levels in some places. This information can be used to estimate tidal regime, current velocities, and water exchange in a coastal lagoon containing marshes if area and bathymetry of the lagoon are known, The least diverse fa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fred B. Phlegm
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.561.219
http://www.aslo.org/lo/toc/vol_15/issue_4/0522.pdf
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Summary:Low marsh and high marsh foraminifera1 populations are related to mean tide levels in some places. This information can be used to estimate tidal regime, current velocities, and water exchange in a coastal lagoon containing marshes if area and bathymetry of the lagoon are known, The least diverse faunas have agglutinated tests and occur in high runoff areas in tropical, temperate, and subarctic areas studied. The most diverse faunas contain abundant calcareous lagoon and open-ocean spccics and result from invasion of undiluted marine water in an area of low runoff. High runoff causes displacement of marsh species into adjacent environments. Large standing stocks of foraminifera in most marshes indicate abundant food and high organic production. Fast deposition of detrital sediment is reflected in high ratios of living specimens to empty tests. tions of calcareous species. Some strongly hypersaline marshes support large popula-Calcareous tests may not bc preserved in ancient sediments because of low “pH below the surface in most marsh sediments