4.2 Article

Controls, variation, and a record of climate change in detailed stable isotope record in a single bryozoan skeleton

Journal

QUATERNARY RESEARCH
Volume 61, Issue 2, Pages 123-133

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.yqres.2003.11.001

Keywords

bryozoa; stable isotopes; delta O-18; delta C-13; climate; ENSO; New Zealand

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The long-lived (about 20 yr) bryozoan Adeonellopsis sp. from Doubtful Sound, New Zealand, precipitates aragonite in isotopic equilibrium with seawater, exerting no metabolic or kinetic effects. Oxygen isotope ratios (delta(18)O) in 61 subsamples (along three branches of a single unaltered colony) range from -0.09 to +0.68parts per thousand PDB (mean = +0.36parts per thousand PDB). Carbon isotope ratios to delta(13)C) range from +0.84 to +2.18 %o PDB (mean = +1.69parts per thousand PDB). Typical of cool-water carbonates, delta(18)O-derived water temperatures range from 14.2 to 17.5 degreesC. Adeonellopsis has a minimum temperature growth threshold of 14 degreesC, recording only a partial record of environmental variation. By correlating seawater temperatures derived from delta(18)O with the Southern Oscillation Index, however, we were able to detect major events such as the 1983 El Nino. Interannual climatic variation can be recorded in skeletal carbonate isotopes. The range of within-colony isotopic variability found in this study (0.77parts per thousand in delta(18)O and 1.34 in delta(13)C) means that among-colony variation must be treated cautiously. Temperate bryozoan isotopes have been tested in less than 2% of described extant species - this highly variable phylum is not yet fully understood. (0 2004 University of Washington. All rights reserved.

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