Climate variability of the last ~2700 years in the Southern Adriatic Sea: Coccolithophore evidences
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2020
Abstract:
New information on paleoenvironmental conditions over the past ?2700
years in the Central Mediterranean Sea have been acquired through the
high-resolution study of calcareous nannofossils preserved in the
sediment core SW104ND14Q recovered in the Southern Adriatic Sea
(SAS) at 1013 m water depth. The surface water properties at this open
SAS site are sensitive to atmospheric forcing (acting both at local and
regional scale) and the North Ionian Sea driven inflowing waters. Our
data show a relationship between reworked coccolith abundances, flood
frequency across the Southern Alps and the North Atlantic Oscillation
(NAO) confirming their value as indicator of runoff/precipitation. Changes
in the abundance of the opportunistic (r-strategist) species Emiliania
huxleyi and deep dweller taxa Florisphaera profunda were used to
reconstruct the upper water column stratification and associated changes
in productivity. The negative correlation between reworked coccoliths
and the N-Ratio (r=-0.44; p=6-7) suggest that fresh water induced
stratification is a major controlling factor of the SAS coccolithophorid
production. High productivity levels occurred during dry periods and/or
time intervals of inflowing salty and nutrient-rich Levantine Intermediate
Waters (LIW) favouring convection while lower levels took place during
high freshwater discharge, mainly during the Little Ice Age (LIA) and two
centennial scale intervals of weakest NAO around 200 BCE and500 CE.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Coccolithophores; reworked coccoliths; primary productivity; South Adriatic Sea; central Mediterranean; last millennia
Elenco autori:
Pelosi, Nicola; Lirer, Fabrizio; Bonomo, Sergio
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