Reconciling single-chamber Mg / Ca with whole-shell d18O in surface to deep-dwelling planktonic foraminifera from the Mozambique Channel

Most planktonic foraminifera migrate vertically through the water column during life, meeting a range of depth-related conditions as they grow and calcify. For reconstructing past ocean conditions from geochemical signals recorded in their shells, it is therefore necessary to know vertical habitat p...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biogeosciences
Main Authors: Steinhardt, Juliane, J., Cléroux, Caroline, C., de Nooijer, Lennart, L.J., Brummer, Geert-Jan, G.-J.A., Zahn, R., Ganssen, G., Reichart, Gert-Jan, G.-J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2015
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-12-2411-2015
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Summary:Most planktonic foraminifera migrate vertically through the water column during life, meeting a range of depth-related conditions as they grow and calcify. For reconstructing past ocean conditions from geochemical signals recorded in their shells, it is therefore necessary to know vertical habitat preferences. Species with a shallow habitat and limited vertical migration will reflect conditions of the surface mixed layer and short-term and mesoscale (i.e. seasonal) perturbations therein. Species spanning a wider range of depth habitats, however, will contain a more heterogeneous, intra-specimen variability (e.g. Mg / Ca and d18O), which is less for species calcifying below the thermocline. Obtained single-chamber Mg / Ca ratios are combined with single-specimen d18O and d13C of the surface-water inhabitant Globigerinoides ruber, the thermocline-dwelling Neogloboquadrina dutertrei and Pulleniatina obliquiloculata, and the deep dweller Globorotalia scitula from the Mozambique Channel. Species-specific Mg / Ca, d13C and d18O data combined with a depth-resolved mass balance model confirm distinctive migration and calcification patterns for each species as a function of hydrography. Whereas single-specimen d18O rarely reflects changes in depth habitat related to hydrography (e.g. temperature), measured Mg / Ca of the last chambers can only be explained by active migration in response to changes in temperature stratification. Foraminiferal geochemistry and modelled depth habitats shows that the single-chamber Mg / Ca and single shell d18O are in agreement with each other and in line with the changes in hydrography induced by eddies.