Title of article :
Constraining calcium isotope fractionation (δ44/40Ca) in modern and fossil scleractinian coral skeleton
Author/Authors :
Stéphane Pretet، نويسنده , , Chloé and Samankassou، نويسنده , , Elias and Felis، نويسنده , , Thomas and Reynaud، نويسنده , , Stéphanie and Bِhm، نويسنده , , Florian and Eisenhauer، نويسنده , , Anton and Ferrier-Pagès، نويسنده , , Christine and Gattuso، نويسنده , , Jean-Pierre and Camoin، نويسنده , , Gilbert، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages :
10
From page :
49
To page :
58
Abstract :
The present study investigates the influence of environmental (temperature, salinity) and biological (growth rate, inter-generic variations) parameters on calcium isotope fractionation (δ44/40Ca) in scleractinian coral skeleton to better constrain this record. Previous studies focused on the δ44/40Ca record in different marine organisms to reconstruct seawater composition or temperature, but only few studies investigated corals. tudy presents measurements performed on modern corals from natural environments (from the Maldives for modern and from Tahiti for fossil corals) as well as from laboratory cultures (Centre Scientifique de Monaco). Measurements on Porites sp., Acropora sp., Montipora verrucosa and Stylophora pistillata allow constraining inter-generic variability. sults show that the fractionation of δ44/40Ca ranges from 0.6 to 0.1‰, independent of the genus or the environmental conditions. No significant relationship between the rate of calcification and δ44/40Ca was found. The weak temperature dependence reported in earlier studies is most probably not the only parameter that is responsible for the fractionation. Indeed, sub-seasonal temperature variations reconstructed by δ18O and Sr/Ca ratio using a multi-proxy approach, are not mirrored in the coralʹs δ44/40Ca variations. The intergeneric variability and intrageneric variability among the studied samples are weak except for S. pistillata, which shows calcium isotopic values increasing with salinity. The variability between samples cultured at a salinity of 40 is higher than those cultured at a salinity of 36 for this species. esent study reveals a strong biological control of the skeletal calcium isotope composition by the polyp and a weak influence of environmental factors, specifically temperature and salinity (except for S. pistillata). Vital effects have to be investigated in situ to better constrain their influence on the calcium isotopic signal. If vital effects could be extracted from the isotopic signal, the calcium isotopic composition of coral skeletons could provide reliable information on the calcium composition and budget in ocean.
Keywords :
Modern/fossil scleractinian corals , Sea Surface Salinity , sea surface temperature , biomineralization , Calcium isotopes
Journal title :
Chemical Geology
Serial Year :
2013
Journal title :
Chemical Geology
Record number :
2261476
Link To Document :
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