4.2 Article

Growth rate and age distribution of deep-sea black corals in the Gulf of Mexico

期刊

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
卷 423, 期 -, 页码 101-U121

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INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps08953

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Black corals; Radiocarbon age; Growth rates; Gulf of Mexico; Oil

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  1. USGS

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Black corals (order Antipatharia) are important long-lived, habitat-forming, sessile, benthic suspension feeders that are found in all oceans and are usually found in water depths greater than 30 m. Deep-water black corals are some of the slowest-growing, longest-lived deep-sea corals known. Previous age dating of a limited number of black coral samples in the Gulf of Mexico focused on extrapolated ages and growth rates based on skeletal Pb-210 dating. Our results greatly expand the age and growth rate data of black corals from the Gulf of Mexico. Radiocarbon analysis of the oldest Leiopathes sp. specimen from the upper De Soto Slope at 300 m water depth indicates that these animals have been growing continuously for at least the last 2 millennia, with growth rates ranging from 8 to 22 mu m yr(-1). Visual growth ring counts based on scanning electron microscopy images were in good agreement with the C-14-derived ages, suggestive of annual ring formation. The presence of bomb-derived C-14 in the outermost samples confirms sinking particulate organic matter as the dominant carbon source and suggests a link between the deep-sea and surface ocean. There was a high degree of reproducibility found between multiple discs cut from the base of each specimen, as well as within duplicate subsamples. Robust C-14-derived chronologies and known surface ocean C-14 reservoir age constraints in the Gulf of Mexico provided reliable calendar ages with future application to the development of proxy records.

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