Title of article :
The influence of seawater carbonate ion concentration [CO32−] on the stable carbon isotope composition of the planktic foraminifera species Globorotalia inflata
Author/Authors :
Wilke، نويسنده , , Iris and Bickert، نويسنده , , Torsten and Peeters، نويسنده , , Frank J.C. Debets، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
16
From page :
243
To page :
258
Abstract :
We sampled the upper water column for living planktic foraminifera along the SW-African continental margin. The species Globorotalia inflata strongly dominates the foraminiferal assemblages with an overall relative abundance of 70–90%. The shell δ18O and δ13C values of G. inflata were measured and compared to the predicted oxygen isotope equilibrium values (δ18Oeq) and to the carbon isotope composition of the total dissolved inorganic carbon (δ13CDIC) of seawater. The δ18O of G. inflata reflects the general gradient observed in the predicted δ18Oeq profile, while the δ13C of G. inflata shows almost no variation with depth and the reflection of the δ13CDIC in the foraminiferal shell seems to be covered by other effects. We found that offsets between δ18Oshell and predicted δ18Oeq in the surface mixed layer do not correlate to changes in seawater [CO32−]. culate an isotopic mass balance of depth integrated growth, we used the oxygen isotope composition of G. inflata to estimate the fraction of the total shell mass that is grown within each plankton tow depth interval of the upper 500 m of the water column. This approach allows us to calculate the Δδ13Cinterval added-DIC; i.e. the isotopic composition of calcite that was grown within a given depth interval. Our results consistently show that the Δδ13CIA-DIC correlates negatively with in situ measured [CO32−] of the ambient water. Using this approach, we found Δδ13CIA-DIC/[CO32−] slopes for G. inflata in the large size fraction (250–355 μm) of − 0.013‰ to 0.015‰ (μmol kg− 1)− 1 and of − 0.013‰ to 0.017‰ (μmol kg− 1)− 1 for the smaller specimens (150–250 μm). These slopes are in the range of those found for other non-symbiotic species, such as Globigerina bulloides, from laboratory culture experiments. Since the Δδ13CIA-DIC/[CO32−] slopes from our field data are nearly identical to the slopes established from laboratory culture experiments we assume that the influence of other effects, such as temperature, are negligibly small. If we correct the δ13C values of G. inflata for a carbonate ion effect, the δ13Cshell and δ13CDIC are correlated with an average offset of 2.11.
Keywords :
Planktic foraminifera , stable isotopes , carbonate ion effect , Globorotalia inflata , Cape basin
Journal title :
Marine Micropaleontology
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Marine Micropaleontology
Record number :
2263844
Link To Document :
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