Radiolarian sedimentary imprint in Atlantic equatorial sediments: Comparison with the yearly flux at 853 m

Radiolarian specific compositions in a series of 20 sediment trap samples covering an entire year (1.3.1989 to 16.3.1990, collected at 853 m) were compared with bottom (0-1 cm) materials from the same site (eastern equatorial Atlantic: 01°47.5′N, 11°07.6′W). Data on mean sediment accumulation rates...

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Autores principales: Boltovskoy, D., Alder, V.A., Abelmann, A.
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03778398_v23_n1_p1_Boltovskoy
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spelling todo:paper_03778398_v23_n1_p1_Boltovskoy2023-10-03T15:31:33Z Radiolarian sedimentary imprint in Atlantic equatorial sediments: Comparison with the yearly flux at 853 m Boltovskoy, D. Alder, V.A. Abelmann, A. accumulation rate microfissil microfossil palaeoceanography radiolaria sediment trap v. fossil record species composition water column Atlantic, (Equatorial Eastern) Atlantic, (Equatorial) Radiolaria Radiolarian specific compositions in a series of 20 sediment trap samples covering an entire year (1.3.1989 to 16.3.1990, collected at 853 m) were compared with bottom (0-1 cm) materials from the same site (eastern equatorial Atlantic: 01°47.5′N, 11°07.6′W). Data on mean sediment accumulation rates at the site of the mooring (1.59 g/cm 2 /kyr), mean radiolarian flux at 853 m (28,446 shells/m 2 /day), and abundance in the 0-1 cm bottom layer (48,258 shells/g) suggest that approximately 95% of the radiolarians produced are lost to the fossil record. Sediment trap sample-to-sample correlations (based on relative abundances of 40 radiolarian species present at levels ≥ 1% in at least one sample, mean value, r=0.886) did not differ significantly from correlations between each water column sample and surface sediments (mean r=0.878). Similarities between the flux and the sediments were not associated with time of year and with periods of enhanced radiolarian output. Two taxa had lower, and nine taxa had higher percentage contributions in the sediments than in any one sediment trap sample, and a few of the abundant species had averages up to 7 times higher in either the water column or the sediments. These dissimilar percentage loadings are attributed to selective dissolution, lateral subsurface and deep advection of shells from higher-latitude areas, and identification biases. As opposed to species-level inventories, family-level databases (including shells identified to family only) differed significantly between the water column and the sediments. Spumellaria (especially Spongodiscidae) were more abundant in the sediments (35%) than in the water column (19%), while Nassellaria showed the opposite trend (64% and 80%, respectively). It is suggested that ease of identification of spongodiscid fragments and fragility of juvenile nassellarians are responsible for these differences. © 1993. Fil:Boltovskoy, D. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Alder, V.A. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03778398_v23_n1_p1_Boltovskoy
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic accumulation rate
microfissil
microfossil
palaeoceanography
radiolaria
sediment trap v. fossil record
species composition
water column
Atlantic, (Equatorial Eastern)
Atlantic, (Equatorial)
Radiolaria
spellingShingle accumulation rate
microfissil
microfossil
palaeoceanography
radiolaria
sediment trap v. fossil record
species composition
water column
Atlantic, (Equatorial Eastern)
Atlantic, (Equatorial)
Radiolaria
Boltovskoy, D.
Alder, V.A.
Abelmann, A.
Radiolarian sedimentary imprint in Atlantic equatorial sediments: Comparison with the yearly flux at 853 m
topic_facet accumulation rate
microfissil
microfossil
palaeoceanography
radiolaria
sediment trap v. fossil record
species composition
water column
Atlantic, (Equatorial Eastern)
Atlantic, (Equatorial)
Radiolaria
description Radiolarian specific compositions in a series of 20 sediment trap samples covering an entire year (1.3.1989 to 16.3.1990, collected at 853 m) were compared with bottom (0-1 cm) materials from the same site (eastern equatorial Atlantic: 01°47.5′N, 11°07.6′W). Data on mean sediment accumulation rates at the site of the mooring (1.59 g/cm 2 /kyr), mean radiolarian flux at 853 m (28,446 shells/m 2 /day), and abundance in the 0-1 cm bottom layer (48,258 shells/g) suggest that approximately 95% of the radiolarians produced are lost to the fossil record. Sediment trap sample-to-sample correlations (based on relative abundances of 40 radiolarian species present at levels ≥ 1% in at least one sample, mean value, r=0.886) did not differ significantly from correlations between each water column sample and surface sediments (mean r=0.878). Similarities between the flux and the sediments were not associated with time of year and with periods of enhanced radiolarian output. Two taxa had lower, and nine taxa had higher percentage contributions in the sediments than in any one sediment trap sample, and a few of the abundant species had averages up to 7 times higher in either the water column or the sediments. These dissimilar percentage loadings are attributed to selective dissolution, lateral subsurface and deep advection of shells from higher-latitude areas, and identification biases. As opposed to species-level inventories, family-level databases (including shells identified to family only) differed significantly between the water column and the sediments. Spumellaria (especially Spongodiscidae) were more abundant in the sediments (35%) than in the water column (19%), while Nassellaria showed the opposite trend (64% and 80%, respectively). It is suggested that ease of identification of spongodiscid fragments and fragility of juvenile nassellarians are responsible for these differences. © 1993.
format JOUR
author Boltovskoy, D.
Alder, V.A.
Abelmann, A.
author_facet Boltovskoy, D.
Alder, V.A.
Abelmann, A.
author_sort Boltovskoy, D.
title Radiolarian sedimentary imprint in Atlantic equatorial sediments: Comparison with the yearly flux at 853 m
title_short Radiolarian sedimentary imprint in Atlantic equatorial sediments: Comparison with the yearly flux at 853 m
title_full Radiolarian sedimentary imprint in Atlantic equatorial sediments: Comparison with the yearly flux at 853 m
title_fullStr Radiolarian sedimentary imprint in Atlantic equatorial sediments: Comparison with the yearly flux at 853 m
title_full_unstemmed Radiolarian sedimentary imprint in Atlantic equatorial sediments: Comparison with the yearly flux at 853 m
title_sort radiolarian sedimentary imprint in atlantic equatorial sediments: comparison with the yearly flux at 853 m
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03778398_v23_n1_p1_Boltovskoy
work_keys_str_mv AT boltovskoyd radiolariansedimentaryimprintinatlanticequatorialsedimentscomparisonwiththeyearlyfluxat853m
AT alderva radiolariansedimentaryimprintinatlanticequatorialsedimentscomparisonwiththeyearlyfluxat853m
AT abelmanna radiolariansedimentaryimprintinatlanticequatorialsedimentscomparisonwiththeyearlyfluxat853m
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