Changes in palaeoproduction in Saanich Inlet, British Columbia, were examined from sediments using total organic carbon contents and stable carbon isotope ratios. Sediments were obtained from Holes 1033B and 1034B of Ocean Drilling Program Leg 169S. These cores contain two distinct zones: (1) carbon
A Holocene record of diatom and silicoflagellate microfossils in sediments of Saanich Inlet, ODP Leg 169S
✍ Scribed by M.R McQuoid; L.A Hobson
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 514 KB
- Volume
- 174
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0025-3227
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✦ Synopsis
ODP Leg 169S laminated sediment cores provided a unique opportunity to examine changes in the siliceous phytoplankton community of Saanich Inlet. These laminated sediments are rich in diatom and silico¯agellate remains as a result of the inlet's high production and excellent preservation. Our results suggest that species composition and abundance of diatoms and silico¯agellates in the inlet have changed very little since the inlet's formation. Carbon and opal data indicate an increase in primary productivity with time which is not apparent in the fossil data. However, the discrepancy between data sets may be due to changes in grazer activity which could have reduced the number of identi®able fossils. Individual species were useful for identifying changes in the inlet. Some planktonic diatoms suggest that nutrient supply was highest in the early±mid Holocene. Increases in the abundance of a partially benthic diatom, Paralia sulcata, follow variations in sea level and availability of benthic habitat in the inlet. A large peak of the silico¯agellate, Dictyocha ®bula, corresponds to a catastrophic ¯ood event in the early Holocene, which probably washed terrestrial material and low salinity water from the British Columbia mainland into Saanich Inlet. Fossil data were also analyzed to infer past changes in the environment using a weighted averaging calibration and regression technique. These data suggest that only minor variations in sea surface temperature have occurred.
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Little is known of long-term processes affecting microbial abundance in buried marine sediments. In collaboration with geochemists and sedimentologists involved in ODP Leg169S, we undertook a study of bacterial and viral abundance throughout the entire Holocene sediment section in Saanich Inlet, Bri