4.4 Article

Calcite crystal orientation patterns in the bilayers of laminated shells of benthic rotaliid foraminifera

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY
Volume 213, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsb.2021.107707

Keywords

Calcite twins; Crystal organization in foraminiferal tests; Electron backscatter diffrection (EBSD); Benthic foraminifera

Funding

  1. European Union [643084]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG [GR-1235/9-1]
  3. Spanish Ministry of Education and Science [CGL2017-85118-P]

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The shells of calcifying foraminifera are important in marine biogeochemical cycles and serve as archives for paleoenvironment reconstruction. There is a lack of consensus on the mineralization mechanisms of foraminiferal shells, which can occur through various methods. This study focuses on deciphering crystallite organization within the shells of benthic foraminifera and highlights their mesocrystalline nature, dendritic-fractal morphologies, and strong interdigitation between crystals.
Shells of calcifying foraminifera play a major role in marine biogeochemical cycles; fossil shells form important archives for paleoenvironment reconstruction. Despite their importance in many Earth science disciplines, there is still little consensus on foraminiferal shell mineralization. Geochemical, biochemical, and physiological studies showed that foraminiferal shell formation might take place through various and diverse mineralization mechanisms. In this study, we contribute to benthic foraminiferal shell calcification through deciphering crystallite organization within the shells. We base our conclusions on results gained from electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD) measurements and describe microstructure/texture characteristics within the laminated shell walls of the benthic, symbiontic foraminifera: Ammonia tepida, Amphistegina lobifera, Amphistegina lessonii. We highlight crystallite assembly patterns obtained on differently oriented cuts and discuss crystallite sizes, morphologies, interlinkages, orientations, and co-orientation strengths. We show that: (i) crystals within benthic foraminiferal shells are mesocrystals, (ii) have dendritic-fractal morphologies and (iii) interdigitate strongly. Based on crystal size, we (iv) differentiate between the two layers that comprise the shells and demonstrate that (v) crystals in the septa have different assemblies relative to those in the shell walls. We highlight that (vi) at junctions of different shell elements the axis of crystal orientation jumps abruptly such that their assembly in EBSD maps has a bimodal distribution. We prove (vii) extensive twin-formation within foraminiferal calcite; we demonstrate (viii) the presence of two twin modes: 60 degrees/[001] and 77 degrees/similar to[6 -6 1] and visualize their distributions within the shells. In a broader perspective, we draw conclusions on processes that lead to the observed microstructure/texture patterns.

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