Title of article :
Temporal shifts in reef lagoon sediment composition, Discovery Bay, Jamaica
Author/Authors :
Christopher T. Perry، نويسنده , , Kevin G. Taylor، نويسنده , , Philip G. Machent، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Discovery Bay, north Jamaica, forms a large (1.5 km wide), deep (up to 56 m) embayment that acts as a sink for reef-derived and lagoonal
carbonate sediments. Since the mid-1960s, the bay has also provided a sink for inputs of bauxite sediment that are spilled during loading at
a boat terminal constructed within Discovery Bay. Bauxite has accumulated across much of the southern section of the bay with surficial sediments
presently composed of up to 35 weight% non-carbonate. Cores recovered from sites on the western side of the bay provide a stratigraphic
record of this history of bauxite contamination across water depths from 5 to 25 m. The bauxite-influenced upper sediment horizons are clearly
visible in each core from the distinctive redebrown colouration of the sediment. These sediments are composed of approximately 10% noncarbonate
(bauxite) and have Fe contents of around 2e3000 mg/g (up to 7000 mg/g). The thickness of this upper bauxite-contaminated sequence
increases down transect (approximately 18 cm in the shallowest core, to around 47 cm in the deepest core), and in each core overlies a sequence
of ‘clean’ lagoon carbonates. These typically are poorly sorted carbonate sands with variable amounts of coral rubble. Down-core data on CaCO3
and Fe content provide a chemical record of decreasing sediment contamination with depth, with the lower ‘clean’ carbonates composed of only
around 2% non-carbonate and <700 mg/g Fe. Down-core sediment-constituent data also indicate significant changes in sediment production at
the shallowest sites. At depths of 5 and 10 m, sediment assemblages have shifted from diverse assemblages of coral, mollusc, Amphiroa and
Halimeda in the clean lagoon sands, to assemblages dominated by Halimeda and Amphiroa within the surficial sediments. At the deeper sites,
no major down-core shifts in sediment constituents occur. These sites thus record a rather complex history of changes in sediment composition
and chemistry. Clear shifts in chemistry and stratigraphy occur in all the cores and reflect progressive bauxite contamination in the near-surface
horizons. These inputs, however, do not appear to have directly affected carbonate production, since the major constituent changes appear to be
a response to more regional declines in coral community and reef status.
Keywords :
lagoon , coral reef , Bauxite , sediment contamination , Carbonate sediment , Jamaica
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
Journal title :
Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science