Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Planktonic foraminiferal Cd/Ca: Paleonutrients or paleotemperature?
View through CrossRef
Records of Cd/Ca in planktonic foraminiferal calcite of Globigerinoides bulloides in cores from the Subantarctic region of the Southern Ocean show large glacial‐interglacial variations with lower Cd/Ca (by 0.06–0.10 µmol mol−1) at glacial times. Interpretation of these records in terms of lower dissolved phosphate and inferred higher glacial nutrient utilization has significant implications for glacial atmospheric carbon dioxide (pCO2) draw‐down. However, box core‐top data for G. bulloides in the North Atlantic suggest that the incorporation of Cd into planktonic foraminifera relative to seawater (DCd) is temperature sensitive (DCd=0.637 exp 0.15T). When the Subantarctic planktonic Cd/Ca records are corrected for this temperature dependence, they show little or no glacial‐interglacial diferences. If, as seems likely, this observation can be interpreted to indicate a minimal change (< 0.5 µmol kg−1) in surface water phosphate concentrations, then the explanation for lowered glacial pCO2 must be looked for elsewhere.
Title: Planktonic foraminiferal Cd/Ca: Paleonutrients or paleotemperature?
Description:
Records of Cd/Ca in planktonic foraminiferal calcite of Globigerinoides bulloides in cores from the Subantarctic region of the Southern Ocean show large glacial‐interglacial variations with lower Cd/Ca (by 0.
06–0.
10 µmol mol−1) at glacial times.
Interpretation of these records in terms of lower dissolved phosphate and inferred higher glacial nutrient utilization has significant implications for glacial atmospheric carbon dioxide (pCO2) draw‐down.
However, box core‐top data for G.
bulloides in the North Atlantic suggest that the incorporation of Cd into planktonic foraminifera relative to seawater (DCd) is temperature sensitive (DCd=0.
637 exp 0.
15T).
When the Subantarctic planktonic Cd/Ca records are corrected for this temperature dependence, they show little or no glacial‐interglacial diferences.
If, as seems likely, this observation can be interpreted to indicate a minimal change (< 0.
5 µmol kg−1) in surface water phosphate concentrations, then the explanation for lowered glacial pCO2 must be looked for elsewhere.
Related Results
Benthic foraminifera associated to cold-water coral ecosystems
Benthic foraminifera associated to cold-water coral ecosystems
Cold-water coral reef ecosystems occur worldwide and are especially developed along the European margin, from northern Norway to the Gulf of Cadiz and into the Western Mediterranea...
Reliability of foraminiferal Na/Ca as a direct paleo-salinity proxy in various planktonic species from the eastern tropical North Atlantic
Reliability of foraminiferal Na/Ca as a direct paleo-salinity proxy in various planktonic species from the eastern tropical North Atlantic
<p><span>Foraminiferal Na/Ca in planktonic and benthic foraminifers is a promising new method to assess directly past seawater salinities, which complem...
Paleoenvironmental and Bio-Sequence Stratigraphic Analysis of the Cretaceous Pelagic Carbonates of Eastern Tethys, Sulaiman Range, Pakistan
Paleoenvironmental and Bio-Sequence Stratigraphic Analysis of the Cretaceous Pelagic Carbonates of Eastern Tethys, Sulaiman Range, Pakistan
The Cretaceous pelagic carbonate succession, i.e., Goru Formation was studied in the Chutair Section, Sulaiman Range, representing part of the eastern Tethys for the paleoenvironme...
Mapping planktonic communities: a network approach to assess the role of scale and centrality on their diversity and composition
Mapping planktonic communities: a network approach to assess the role of scale and centrality on their diversity and composition
AbstractThe distribution of habitats across a landscape and their centrality gradient are key elements defining the effective pathways of dispersal, and thus of metacommunity assem...
New data on nannofossil and planktonic foraminiferal composition in the Lower Miocene Alkun formation, Ciscaucasia
New data on nannofossil and planktonic foraminiferal composition in the Lower Miocene Alkun formation, Ciscaucasia
Nannofossils and planktonic foraminifers derived from the Lower Miocene Alkun Formation in the central and western Ciscaucasia were studied in the following sections: the stratotyp...
Foraminiferal-ostracod late jurassic biozonation of the Scotian shelf
Foraminiferal-ostracod late jurassic biozonation of the Scotian shelf
The writer's 1977 foraminiferal and ostracod biozonation of the Scotian Shelf has been updated and refined for the Late Jurassic interval and extended to the East Newfoundland Baso...
Reducing High Pressure Processing Costs: Efficacious Alternatives to Current Standard Procedures in the Food Manufacturing Industry
Reducing High Pressure Processing Costs: Efficacious Alternatives to Current Standard Procedures in the Food Manufacturing Industry
AbstractAs a result of recent advancements in design and optimization of high-pressure processing units, the technology is gaining rapid adoption across various sectors of food man...
Tertiary molluscs of the Scotian Shelf, Atlantic Canada
Tertiary molluscs of the Scotian Shelf, Atlantic Canada
Cuttings from the Cenozoic section of LASMO/NSRL Cohasset Producer CPl P-51, a production well on the Scotian Shelf, offshore Atlantic Canada, contain relatively large numbers of s...

