4.1 Article

LIVE (STAINED) BENTHIC FORAMINIFERA OFF WALVIS BAY, NAMIBIA: A DEEP-SEA ECOSYSTEM UNDER THE INFLUENCE OF BOTTOM NEPHELOID LAYERS

Journal

JOURNAL OF FORAMINIFERAL RESEARCH
Volume 43, Issue 1, Pages 55-71

Publisher

CUSHMAN FOUNDATION FORAMINIFERAL RESEARCH
DOI: 10.2113/gsjfr.43.1.55

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Funding

  1. ESF EUROMARC project
  2. INSU
  3. INSU, and IPEV

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We present an ecological investigation of live (stained) foraminiferal faunas (>150-mu m fraction) from four deep-sea stations sampled in the eastern South Atlantic off Walvis Bay, Namibia. These stations describe a bathymetric transect from similar to 900 to similar to 3000-m depth, below the oxygen minimum zone related to the Benguela upwelling system. The mineralization of organic detritus, as suggested by oxygen-penetration depths and Delta pH depth profiles, is relatively intense along the overall bathymetric transect. Organic carbon and amino-acid contents in the surface sediment are high between similar to 900-2000-m depth (e.g., C-org > 1.7%, THAA > 47 nmol/mg), and decrease along the bathymetric transect. Carbon-14 ages and grain-size distribution determined for the upper sediment suggest a complex balance between erosion, transportation, and deposition at all stations. Bottom nepheloid layers (BNLs) are well-documented in our study area. They are relevant candidates for the dispersion and accumulation of reworked organic compounds along the Namibian slope. Foraminiferal faunas living at the three shallower sites are characterized by species (e.g., Cibicidoides kullenbergi, Bulimina inflatalcostata) related to the enhanced productivity. The occurrence of epibiotic species (Cibicides refulgens, Gavelinopsis translucens, and C. kullenbergi) argues for bottom currents supplying organic compounds in suspension above the sediment-water interface. In those environmental conditions, Reophax bilocularis, R. pilulifer, and Lagenammina difflugiformis contribute significantly to live communities, especially at the lower-slope site. Live foraminiferal faunas are largely restricted to shallow-infaunal oxygenated microhabitats. Finally, we propose that hydro-sedimentary conditions characterized by more or less intermittent near-bottom currents 1) trigger the dominance of arenaceous faunas and 2) preclude the proliferation of a foraminiferal population in deep-infaunal microhabitats.

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