4.7 Article

Live (Rose Bengal stained) foraminiferal faunas from the northern Arabian Sea: faunal succession within and below the OMZ

Journal

BIOGEOSCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages 1155-1175

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/bg-11-1155-2014

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [817.01.015]
  2. NWO-ALW (Earth and Life sciences council) [820.01.011]

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Live (Rose Bengal stained) benthic foraminifera from the Murray Ridge, within and below the northern Arabian Sea oxygen minimum zone (OMZ), were studied in order to determine the relationship between faunal composition, bottom water oxygenation (BWO), pore water chemistry and organic matter (organic carbon and phytopigment) distribution. A series of multicores were recovered from a ten-station oxygen (BWO: 2-78 mu M) and bathymetric (885-3010 m depth) transect during the winter monsoon in January 2009. Foraminifera were investigated from three different size fractions (63-125 mu m, 125-150 mu m and > 150 mu m). The larger foraminifera (> 125 mu m) were strongly dominated by agglutinated species (e. g. Reophax spp.). In contrast, in the 63-125 mu m fraction, calcareous taxa were more abundant, especially in the core of the OMZ. On the basis of a principal components analysis, three foraminiferal groups were identified and correlated to the environmental parameters by canonical correspondence analysis. The faunas from the shallowest stations, in the core of the OMZ (BWO: 2 mu M), were composed of low oxygen species, typical of the Arabian Sea OMZ (e. g. Rotaliatinopsis semiinvoluta, Praeglobobulimina sp., Bulimina exilis, Uvigerina peregrina type parva). These taxa are adapted to the very low BWO conditions and to high phytodetritus supplies. The transitional group, typical for the lower part of the OMZ (BWO: 5-16 mu M), is composed of species that are tolerant as well to low-oxygen concentrations, but may be less critical with respect to organic supplies (e. g. Globocassidulina subglobosa, Ehrenbergina trigona). Below the OMZ (BWO: 26-78 mu M), where food availability is more limited and becomes increasingly restricted to surficial sediments, cosmopolitan calcareous taxa were present, such as Bulimina aculeata, Melonis barleeanus, Uvigerina peregrina and Epistominella exigua. Miliolids were uniquely observed in this last zone, reflecting the higher BWO and/or lower organic input. At these deeper sites, the faunas exhibit a clear succession of superficial, intermediate and deep infaunal microhabitats, which can be linked to the deeper oxygen and nitrate penetration into the sediment.

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