4.7 Article

Modeling and interpreting triple oxygen isotope variations in vertebrates, with implications for paleoclimate and paleoecology

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 642, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2023.121812

Keywords

Triple oxygen isotopes; Animal body water; Evaporation; Aridity; Ecophysiology; Paleoclimate

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The O-18/O-16 ratios of biominerals are influenced by various factors, including regional climate, local hydrology, and behavioral and physiological factors. The addition of O-17 allows for further resolution of these factors. The study presents a triple oxygen isotope mass balance model and evaluates it against data from modern and fossil animals. The model predicts that animals in arid environments have wider ranges and lower minimum values of body water Delta'O-17, and leaf water consumers are more sensitive to relative humidity variations.
The O-18/O-16 ratios of biominerals have been widely used for reconstructing ecophysiology and climatic settings of modern and extinct animals. However, the O-18/O-16 ratios of body water, which largely determine the O-18/O-16 ratios of biominerals, are influenced by a host of competing factors. Regional climate and local hydrology are dominant controls on water isotopic composition before water is consumed by an animal. Behavioral and physiological factors, modified by local climate, also have a strong influence on body water compositions. The addition of a third isotope, O-17 (expressed as Delta'O-17) potentially allows for further resolution of these factors. Here we construct a generalized triple oxygen isotope mass balance model based on the O-18 model of (Kohn 1996) (Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 60, 4811-4829) and examine the influence on vertebrate animal body water Delta'O-17 of numerous climatic, ecological, and isotopic variables. We evaluate the model against new and previously published triple oxygen isotope data from modern and fossil animals. The model predicts that animals from arid environments will have wider ranges and lower minimum values of body water Delta'O-17 than animals living in humid environments. Leaf water consumers are more sensitive to variations in relative humidity and have lower Delta'O-17 than surface water consumers, which more closely track meteoric water compositions. In this model, factors such as body mass and relative proportions of evaporative versus nonevaporative effluxes from the animal have a lesser influence on animal Delta'O-17. If delta O-18 of meteoric water is invariant, body water isotopic compositions will form approximately linear arrays in Delta'O-17 versus delta O-18 space with slopes of similar to 0.52. Study of Delta'O-17 becomes most useful when delta O-18 of meteoric water is variable or unknown (as is generally the case for fossil animals); in this case Delta'O-17 of body water responds more strongly to changes in relative humidity, evaporated water inputs, and animal water use efficiency. These predictions are generally supported by observations of Delta'O-17 for modern animals. This agreement suggests that Delta'O-17 analysis of animal tissues has great potential as a paleo-aridity proxy in continental environments and as a proxy for learning about the ecology of modern and extinct animals.

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