Mg/Ca and δ¹⁸O measurements of planktonic foraminifera from Sargasso Sea

View Dataset
Anand, Pallavi;Elderfield, Henry;Conte, Maureen H

Description

Paired Mg/Ca and d18O measurements on planktonic foraminiferal species (G. ruber white, G. ruber pink, G. sacculifer, G. conglobatus, G. aequilateralis, O. universa, N. dutertrei, P. obliquiloculata, G. inflata, G. truncatulinoides, G. hirsuta, and G. crassaformis) from a 6-year sediment trap time series in the Sargasso Sea were used to define the sensitivity of foraminiferal Mg/Ca to calcification temperature. Habitat depths and calcification temperatures were estimated from comparison of d18O of foraminifera with equilibrium calcite, based on historical temperature and salinity data. When considered together, Mg/Ca (mmol/mol) of all species, except two, show a significant (r = 0.93) relationship with temperature (T °C) of the form Mg/Ca = 0.38 (±0.02) exp 0.090 (±0.003)T, equivalent to a 9.0 ± 0.3% change in Mg/Ca for a 1°C change in temperature. Small differences exist in calibrations between species and between different size fractions of the same species. O. universa and G. aequilateralis have higher Mg/Ca than other species, and in general, data can be best described with the same temperature sensitivity for all species and pre-exponential constants in the sequence O. universa > G. aequilateralis = G. bulloides > G. ruber = G. sacculifer = other species. This approach gives an accuracy of ±1.2°C in the estimation of calcification temperature. The 9% sensitivity to temperature is similar to published studies from culture and core top calibrations, but differences exist from some literature values of pre-exponential constants. Different cleaning methodologies and artefacts of core top dissolution are probably implicated, and perhaps environmental factors yet understood. Planktonic foraminiferal Mg/Ca temperature estimates can be used for reconstructing surface temperatures and mixed and thermocline temperatures (using G. ruber pink, G. ruber white, G. sacculifer, N. dutertrei, P. obliquiloculata, etc.). The existence of a single Mg thermometry equation is valuable for extinct species, although use of species-specific equations will, where statistically significant, provide more accurate evaluation of Mg/Ca paleotemperature.

Citations (1)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

2.9

FAIR Score

92%

Citations

1

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

PANGAEA

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Atmospheric Science

Field

Earth and Planetary Sciences

Domain

Physical Sciences

Confidence Score

96%

Source

Open Alex

Keywords

DATE/TIMEForaminifera, planktic, size minimumForaminifera, planktic, size maximumGlobigerinoides ruber, Magnesium/Calcium ratioGlobigerinoides ruber, δ18OGlobigerinoides sacculifer, Magnesium/Calcium ratioGlobigerinoides sacculifer, δ18OGlobigerinoides sacculifer sac, δ18OPulleniatina obliquiloculata, Magnesium/Calcium ratioPulleniatina obliquiloculata, δ18ONeogloboquadrina dutertrei, Magnesium/Calcium ratioNeogloboquadrina dutertrei, δ18OGlobigerinoides conglobatus, Magnesium/Calcium ratioGlobigerinoides conglobatus, δ18OGloborotalia inflata, Magnesium/Calcium ratioGloborotalia inflata, δ18OGloborotalia truncatulinoides, Magnesium/Calcium ratioGloborotalia truncatulinoides, δ18OGloborotalia hirsuta, Magnesium/Calcium ratioGloborotalia hirsuta, δ18OGloborotalia crassaformis, Magnesium/Calcium ratioGloborotalia crassaformis, δ18OOrbulina universa, Magnesium/Calcium ratioOrbulina universa, δ18OGlobigerinella aequilateralis, Magnesium/Calcium ratioGlobigerinella aequilateralis, δ18OTrap, sedimentCountingAtomic emission spectroscopy (AES)

Normalization Factors

FT

13.46

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00