4.5 Article

Response of biological productivity to North Atlantic marine front migration during the Holocene

Journal

CLIMATE OF THE PAST
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages 379-396

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/cp-17-379-2021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Icelandic Centre for Research [141573-051]
  2. University of Colorado Boulder

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The study combines data from different sources to detail the impact of the migration of the Arctic and polar fronts on the biological response over the past 8000 years on the North Iceland Shelf, showing the relationship between environmental changes and the position of the fronts. Research on the migration of the Arctic and polar fronts aids in understanding the changes in local productivity in response to climate change.
Marine fronts delineate the boundary between distinct water masses and, through the advection of nutrients, are important facilitators of regional productivity and biodiversity. As the modern climate continues to change, the migration of frontal zones is evident, but a lack of information about their status prior to instrumental records hinders future projections. Here, we combine data from lipid biomarkers (archaeal isoprenoid glycerol dibiphytanyl glycerol tetraethers and algal highly branched isoprenoids) with planktic and benthic foraminifera assemblages to detail the biological response of the marine Arctic and polar front migrations on the North Iceland Shelf (NIS) over the last 8 kyr. This multi-proxy approach enables us to quantify the thermal structure relating to Arctic and polar front migration and test how this influences the corresponding changes in local pelagic productivity. Our data show that following an interval of Atlantic water influence, the Arctic front and its associated high pelagic productivity migrated southeastward to the NIS by similar to 6.1 ka. Following a subsequent trend in regional cooling, Polar Water from the East Greenland Current and the associated polar front spread onto the NIS by similar to 3.8 ka, greatly diminishing local algal productivity through the Little Ice Age. Within the last century, the Arctic and polar fronts have moved northward back to their current positions relative to the NIS and helped stimulate the productivity that partially supports Iceland's economy. Our Holocene records from the NIS provide analogues for how the current frontal configuration and the productivity that it supports may change as global temperatures continue to rise.

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