Environmental control of the isotopic composition of subfossil coccolith calcite: Are laboratory culture data transferable to the natural environment?

Coccoliths contribute significantly to pelagic sediments formed over the last 200 million years, yet their geochemistry has been largely overlooked as a potential record of palaeoenvironmental information. Recently developed techniques have enabled successful extraction of coccolith-dominated sedime...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hermoso, M, Candelier, Y, Browning, T, Minoletti, F
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015
_version_ 1797080292260839424
author Hermoso, M
Candelier, Y
Browning, T
Minoletti, F
author_facet Hermoso, M
Candelier, Y
Browning, T
Minoletti, F
author_sort Hermoso, M
collection OXFORD
description Coccoliths contribute significantly to pelagic sediments formed over the last 200 million years, yet their geochemistry has been largely overlooked as a potential record of palaeoenvironmental information. Recently developed techniques have enabled successful extraction of coccolith-dominated sediment fractions. However, the reliability of palaeoenvironmental interpretations that can be drawn from coccolith analyses is still confounded by a poor understanding of the “vital effect” – the physiological component of the isotopic composition of biominerals. Here we demonstrate that oxygen isotope composition in core-top coccoliths is not only set by the temperature and isotopic composition of seawater, but appears to be controlled to first order by the environmental factors regulating algal growth rate. Partial registration of the isotopic signature of assimilated CO<sub>2</sub> (with a heavy isotopic composition relative to other dissolved inorganic carbon species) is confirmed to be the dominant mechanism behind the vital effect recorded in the Noelaerhabdaceae coccoliths. Our data point towards a strong role of growth irradiance on expression of the <sup>18</sup>O and <sup>13</sup>C vital effects, ranging from limited (near equilibrium composition) in low light regimes to 3% offset in oxygen isotopes at higher growth irradiances, such as those found under light-saturated conditions typically imposed in laboratory cultures. This highlights the importance of considering environmental controls when translating oxygen isotope composition of coccoliths into temperature estimates. Furthermore, our calibration suggests that the alkenone-based CO<sub>2</sub> palaeobarometer proxy may be refined by combining paired organic/calcite measurements during the Cenozoic.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T00:57:54Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:88b87d50-b3a1-4108-baa5-4cfad9fa6e6b
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T00:57:54Z
publishDate 2015
publisher Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:88b87d50-b3a1-4108-baa5-4cfad9fa6e6b2022-03-26T22:19:20ZEnvironmental control of the isotopic composition of subfossil coccolith calcite: Are laboratory culture data transferable to the natural environment?Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:88b87d50-b3a1-4108-baa5-4cfad9fa6e6bEnglishORA DepositElsevier2015Hermoso, MCandelier, YBrowning, TMinoletti, FCoccoliths contribute significantly to pelagic sediments formed over the last 200 million years, yet their geochemistry has been largely overlooked as a potential record of palaeoenvironmental information. Recently developed techniques have enabled successful extraction of coccolith-dominated sediment fractions. However, the reliability of palaeoenvironmental interpretations that can be drawn from coccolith analyses is still confounded by a poor understanding of the “vital effect” – the physiological component of the isotopic composition of biominerals. Here we demonstrate that oxygen isotope composition in core-top coccoliths is not only set by the temperature and isotopic composition of seawater, but appears to be controlled to first order by the environmental factors regulating algal growth rate. Partial registration of the isotopic signature of assimilated CO<sub>2</sub> (with a heavy isotopic composition relative to other dissolved inorganic carbon species) is confirmed to be the dominant mechanism behind the vital effect recorded in the Noelaerhabdaceae coccoliths. Our data point towards a strong role of growth irradiance on expression of the <sup>18</sup>O and <sup>13</sup>C vital effects, ranging from limited (near equilibrium composition) in low light regimes to 3% offset in oxygen isotopes at higher growth irradiances, such as those found under light-saturated conditions typically imposed in laboratory cultures. This highlights the importance of considering environmental controls when translating oxygen isotope composition of coccoliths into temperature estimates. Furthermore, our calibration suggests that the alkenone-based CO<sub>2</sub> palaeobarometer proxy may be refined by combining paired organic/calcite measurements during the Cenozoic.
spellingShingle Hermoso, M
Candelier, Y
Browning, T
Minoletti, F
Environmental control of the isotopic composition of subfossil coccolith calcite: Are laboratory culture data transferable to the natural environment?
title Environmental control of the isotopic composition of subfossil coccolith calcite: Are laboratory culture data transferable to the natural environment?
title_full Environmental control of the isotopic composition of subfossil coccolith calcite: Are laboratory culture data transferable to the natural environment?
title_fullStr Environmental control of the isotopic composition of subfossil coccolith calcite: Are laboratory culture data transferable to the natural environment?
title_full_unstemmed Environmental control of the isotopic composition of subfossil coccolith calcite: Are laboratory culture data transferable to the natural environment?
title_short Environmental control of the isotopic composition of subfossil coccolith calcite: Are laboratory culture data transferable to the natural environment?
title_sort environmental control of the isotopic composition of subfossil coccolith calcite are laboratory culture data transferable to the natural environment
work_keys_str_mv AT hermosom environmentalcontroloftheisotopiccompositionofsubfossilcoccolithcalcitearelaboratoryculturedatatransferabletothenaturalenvironment
AT candeliery environmentalcontroloftheisotopiccompositionofsubfossilcoccolithcalcitearelaboratoryculturedatatransferabletothenaturalenvironment
AT browningt environmentalcontroloftheisotopiccompositionofsubfossilcoccolithcalcitearelaboratoryculturedatatransferabletothenaturalenvironment
AT minolettif environmentalcontroloftheisotopiccompositionofsubfossilcoccolithcalcitearelaboratoryculturedatatransferabletothenaturalenvironment