Compartir
Título
Nutrients and hydrography explain the composition of recent Mediterranean planktonic foraminiferal assemblages
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Planktonic foraminifera
Mediterranean
Nutrients
Chlorophyll
Temperature
Stratification
Mediterráneo
Temperatura
Capas rojas (Sedimentología)
Clasificación UNESCO
2506.18 Sedimentología
2508.06 Hidrografía
Fecha de publicación
2023
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Azibeiro, L. A., Kučera, M., Jonkers, L., Cloke-Hayes, A., & Sierro, F. J. (2023). Nutrients and hydrography explain the composition of recent Mediterranean planktonic foraminiferal assemblages. Marine Micropaleontology, 179, 102201.
Resumen
[EN]The composition of planktonic foraminiferal assemblages in surface sediments of the Mediterranean Sea shows a pronounced zonal gradient. This gradient is different from what is observed in the open ocean, indicating that the assemblage composition may respond to environmental variables other than the otherwise dominant surface water temperature. Here we make use of a dataset of census counts of 18 taxonomic categories in 124 surface-sediment samples extracted from the ForCenS database to understand the main environmental factors affecting the composition of recent Mediterranean planktonic foraminiferal assemblages. The tested explanatory variables include temperature, salinity, chlorophyll, nitrate and phosphate concentrations in the surface waters, temperature, nitrate and phosphate concentrations at depth and thermal, salinity and density vertical gradients. The composition of the assemblages is aligned along two environmental gradients and redundancy analysis reveals that the tested variables explain a large portion (>70%) of the variance in the compositional data. The first environmental gradient reflects the nutrient content in the deep waters, affecting nutrient availability in the productive zone, while the second gradient is driven by higher (northern area) and lower (southern area) upward nutrient advection due to differences in density stratification, conditioned by the regional hydrography. Although sea surface temperature is the most reconstructed environmental variable from fossil assemblages of planktonic foraminifera, it seems to play a secondary role in the Mediterranean Sea. This, has implications for reconstructions of past oceanographic conditions in this region, opening up the possibility to reconstruct productivity instead, or next to, temperature.
URI
ISSN
0377-8398
DOI
10.1016/j.marmicro.2022.102201
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
- DGL. Artículos [364]
Patrocinador
Publicación en abierto financiada por la Universidad de Salamanca como participante en el Acuerdo Transformativo CRUE-CSIC con Elsevier, 2021-2024













