Habitats and chemical characteristics of planktonic foraminifera in the Atlantic Ocean

Planktonic foraminifera are free-floating protozoa, which react sensitively on their immediate environment. The geographical distribution of planktonic foraminifera is, above all, related to water temperature. On the other hand, the vertical distribution is much more differentiated and governed by a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harbers, Almuth Thea Elisabeth
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/11622/
https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/11622/1/2011_Diss_Harbers_LQ.pdf
http://macau.uni-kiel.de/receive/dissertation_diss_00006274
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Summary:Planktonic foraminifera are free-floating protozoa, which react sensitively on their immediate environment. The geographical distribution of planktonic foraminifera is, above all, related to water temperature. On the other hand, the vertical distribution is much more differentiated and governed by an interaction of physical, biological and chemical parameters. Chemical entities are also imprinting foraminiferal shells during their ontogenesis and thus, make the foraminifera a signal carrier for environmental and paleoceanographical proxies. Therefore, I focused on biogeographical studies and on chemical aspects to assess planktonic foraminiferal habitats and to improve our understanding of the role of planktonic foraminifera as environmental signal carriers. The present study focuses on three regions of the Atlantic Ocean, the seas to the west of Ireland, Cape Verde and central tropical Atlantic. A comparison of faunal composition in intermediate water of the North Atlantic Ocean did not reveal differences between recent faunal composition to subfossil assemblages from surface sediments, but the species proportions were different. This contrast was mainly driven by the subtropical species Globorotalia hirsuta, which was frequent in 2004 but rare in surface sediment samples and in earlier plankton collections obtained from the southern Porcupine Seabight during the 1990s. Furthermore, the study revealed the influence of phytoplankton blooms on foraminiferal weight and thus, a strong contribution of G. hirsuta, Neogloboquadrina incompta and Globigerina bulloides to the foraminiferal carbonate flux. In the tropical Atlantic, the fine-scale vertical distribution coupled with the size distribution of planktonic foramininferal species revealed a distinctly different standing stock between the central Atlantic and the Cape Verde region. The most regular pattern was observed in the surface dwelling Globigerinoides sacculifer, which had a steady abundance over the entire sampling period in both regions. In contrast, ...