The shallow marine ostracod communities of the Azores (Mid- North Atlantic): taphonomy and palaeoecology

This is the first palaeoecological and taphonomical study of the Recent marine ostracods from the Azores. The aims of this work were to address the following questions: i) to establish the typical ostracod assemblages from the shallow waters of the Azores; ii) to determine the bathymetric ranges for...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Piazza Meireles, R., Keyse, D., Borges, P.A., Silva, L., de Frias Martins, A.M., Ávila, S.P.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Universitat de Barcelona 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.raco.cat/index.php/GeologicaActa/article/view/275588
id ftraco:oai:raco.cat:article/275588
record_format openpolar
spelling ftraco:oai:raco.cat:article/275588 2023-05-15T17:35:48+02:00 The shallow marine ostracod communities of the Azores (Mid- North Atlantic): taphonomy and palaeoecology Piazza Meireles, R. Keyse, D. Borges, P.A. Silva, L. de Frias Martins, A.M. Ávila, S.P. 2014-04-22 http://www.raco.cat/index.php/GeologicaActa/article/view/275588 unknown Universitat de Barcelona Geologica Acta; 2014: Vol.: 12 Núm.: 1; 53-70 Ostracods; Recent; Oceanic islands; Taphonomic processes; Palaeoecology; Bayesian model info:eu-repo/semantics/article Article revisat per persones expertes info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2014 ftraco 2014-04-22T23:44:20Z This is the first palaeoecological and taphonomical study of the Recent marine ostracods from the Azores. The aims of this work were to address the following questions: i) to establish the typical ostracod assemblages from the shallow waters of the Azores; ii) to determine the bathymetric ranges for each ostracod species; iii) to investigate the time span and depth in which significant transport occurs; iv) to quantify the amount of out of habitat transport between sandy beaches, tide pools and the sublittoral; v) to determine distinctive taphonomic features that can be used to recognize the amount of temporal resolution in ostracod assemblages. Fifteen species were recovered, representing 8 families and 12 genera (Loxoconcha, Neonesidea, Xestoleberis, Aurila, Urocythereis, Heterocythereis, Carinocythereis, Callistocythere, Leptocythere, Semicytherura, Lanceostoma and Cylindroleberis). The living assemblages are dominated by specimens of the Loxoconchidae, Xestoleberidae and Hemicytheridae, whereas the dead assemblages are dominated by specimens of the Loxoconchidae, Hemicytheridae, Bairdiidae, Xestoleberidae and Trachyleberidae. The shift from life-dominated assemblages in the shallower depths to death-dominated assemblages at greater depths is a consequence of significant transport downwards. The abundance of ostracods is higher in the first 10-20 m depth, especially in fine to medium sandy substrates. Considerable differences among islands were supported by the Bayesian model, as a consequence of the physical and hydrodynamic factors that differently affect each of the Azorean islands. Large-scale (sea-surface currents, Holocene relative sea-level, storms) and small-scale processes are responsible for shaping the Azorean Recent marine ostracod communities. No living specimens were found in the samples collected at the beach faces, thus reinforcing former interpretations of one of the authors (S. Ávila) that advocate that at a global scale, sandy beaches in oceanic islands located at temperate latitudes are almost or even completely devoid of life due to historical reasons related with the sea level changes. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic RACO: Revistes Catalanes amb Accés Obert
institution Open Polar
collection RACO: Revistes Catalanes amb Accés Obert
op_collection_id ftraco
language unknown
topic Ostracods; Recent; Oceanic islands; Taphonomic processes; Palaeoecology; Bayesian model
spellingShingle Ostracods; Recent; Oceanic islands; Taphonomic processes; Palaeoecology; Bayesian model
Piazza Meireles, R.
Keyse, D.
Borges, P.A.
Silva, L.
de Frias Martins, A.M.
Ávila, S.P.
The shallow marine ostracod communities of the Azores (Mid- North Atlantic): taphonomy and palaeoecology
topic_facet Ostracods; Recent; Oceanic islands; Taphonomic processes; Palaeoecology; Bayesian model
description This is the first palaeoecological and taphonomical study of the Recent marine ostracods from the Azores. The aims of this work were to address the following questions: i) to establish the typical ostracod assemblages from the shallow waters of the Azores; ii) to determine the bathymetric ranges for each ostracod species; iii) to investigate the time span and depth in which significant transport occurs; iv) to quantify the amount of out of habitat transport between sandy beaches, tide pools and the sublittoral; v) to determine distinctive taphonomic features that can be used to recognize the amount of temporal resolution in ostracod assemblages. Fifteen species were recovered, representing 8 families and 12 genera (Loxoconcha, Neonesidea, Xestoleberis, Aurila, Urocythereis, Heterocythereis, Carinocythereis, Callistocythere, Leptocythere, Semicytherura, Lanceostoma and Cylindroleberis). The living assemblages are dominated by specimens of the Loxoconchidae, Xestoleberidae and Hemicytheridae, whereas the dead assemblages are dominated by specimens of the Loxoconchidae, Hemicytheridae, Bairdiidae, Xestoleberidae and Trachyleberidae. The shift from life-dominated assemblages in the shallower depths to death-dominated assemblages at greater depths is a consequence of significant transport downwards. The abundance of ostracods is higher in the first 10-20 m depth, especially in fine to medium sandy substrates. Considerable differences among islands were supported by the Bayesian model, as a consequence of the physical and hydrodynamic factors that differently affect each of the Azorean islands. Large-scale (sea-surface currents, Holocene relative sea-level, storms) and small-scale processes are responsible for shaping the Azorean Recent marine ostracod communities. No living specimens were found in the samples collected at the beach faces, thus reinforcing former interpretations of one of the authors (S. Ávila) that advocate that at a global scale, sandy beaches in oceanic islands located at temperate latitudes are almost or even completely devoid of life due to historical reasons related with the sea level changes.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Piazza Meireles, R.
Keyse, D.
Borges, P.A.
Silva, L.
de Frias Martins, A.M.
Ávila, S.P.
author_facet Piazza Meireles, R.
Keyse, D.
Borges, P.A.
Silva, L.
de Frias Martins, A.M.
Ávila, S.P.
author_sort Piazza Meireles, R.
title The shallow marine ostracod communities of the Azores (Mid- North Atlantic): taphonomy and palaeoecology
title_short The shallow marine ostracod communities of the Azores (Mid- North Atlantic): taphonomy and palaeoecology
title_full The shallow marine ostracod communities of the Azores (Mid- North Atlantic): taphonomy and palaeoecology
title_fullStr The shallow marine ostracod communities of the Azores (Mid- North Atlantic): taphonomy and palaeoecology
title_full_unstemmed The shallow marine ostracod communities of the Azores (Mid- North Atlantic): taphonomy and palaeoecology
title_sort shallow marine ostracod communities of the azores (mid- north atlantic): taphonomy and palaeoecology
publisher Universitat de Barcelona
publishDate 2014
url http://www.raco.cat/index.php/GeologicaActa/article/view/275588
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Geologica Acta; 2014: Vol.: 12 Núm.: 1; 53-70
_version_ 1766135083253628928