Temperature control on the incorporation of magnesium, strontium, fluorine, and cadmium into benthic foraminiferal shells from Little Bahama Bank: Prospects for thermocline paleoceanography

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Scientific paper

Surface sediments from Little Bahama Bank (LBB ), intersecting the subtropical thermocline, were used to assess the influence of temperature on the incorporation of Mg, Sr, F, and Cd into shells of benthic foraminifera. Samples were obtained from twelve ☐ cores along the southern slope of LBB, covering a temperature range of 18-4.5°C between 301 and 1585 m. We studied the composition of ten calcitic and one aragonitic species, which are often used in paleochemical reconstructions. Mg/Ca ratios decrease with increasing water depth in all benthic species, both with calcitic and aragonitic mineralogy, showing a strong correlation with water temperature. Similar decrease is seen in Sr/Ca but with no correlation with temperature. None of the benthic species studied here exhibits a depth or temperature related change in F/Ca. Similar trends are observed when using an ocean-wide dataset, which includes shallow and deep core tops (300 5000 m). We suggest that temperature is the primary control on the Mg content of benthic foraminifera. Based on inorganic precipitation experiments and thermodynamic considerations, presented here, a 30 40% decrease in the Mg distribution coefficient in calcite may be expected as a result of a temperature change from 25°C to 5°C, which is about half the observed change in LBB. A calibration curve applied to C. pachyderma data from core tops along the slope of Little Bahama Bank suggests that water temperature may be inferred from Mg/Ca ratios with an uncertainty of about ±0.8°C. Therefore, the Mg content of benthic foraminifera may provide a new, independent temperature proxy for studying shallow waters paleoceanography. The linear decrease in Sr/Ca with increasing depth is not correlated with temperature; the trend is constant from the ocean surface down to 5 km, suggesting that pressure related effects on the calcification process are a more likely explanation than post-depositional dissolution. Mg/Ca ratios in aragonitic shells of H. elegans covary with temperature, in accord with recent observations from corals. In contrast, the Sr and F chemistry of H. elegans is very different than that of corals and inorganically precipitated aragonites. The disparities between the elemental composition of biogenic and inorganic phases and the large intergeneric and interspecific differences observed both in planktonic and benthic foraminifera implicate temperature related physiological processes in regulating the coprecipitation of elements in foraminiferal shells. Our work demonstrates that Cd/Ca ratios of shallow calcitic species reflect the vertical distribution of nutrients; no significant influence of temperature on the partitioning of Cd into the shells was found. Our data extend the previous deep water calibration (Boyle, 1992), thereby allowing for the reconstruction of the nutrient chemistry of shallow thermocline waters.

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