Decoupling of pore water chemistry, bacterial community profiles, and carbonate mud diagenesis in a land-locked pool on Aldabra (Seychelles, Indian Ocean)

Comparative pore water-sediment studies are crucial to trace biogeochemical and early diagenetic interactions between mineral and fluid phases. They are commonly conducted in environments either stable throughout longer timespans or with high sediment production rates, which create a depositional record with long time diagenetic alterations between the sediment and contemporaneous pore water. In contrast, shallow evaporative ponds with varying hydro chemistry, create a record with shorter reaction pathways and, thus, shorter duration of diagenetic processes. This work presents a pore water-sediment study within the Cinq Cases pool system, a shallow and saline water body with occasional marine influx, located on the Aldabra atoll in the western Indian Ocean. Sediments span ca. 3800 years, with three environmental stages: (i) an initial palustrine environment (Unit III), (ii) a slow marine flooding, with cyanobacteria and sponge blooms (Unit II), and (iii) lagoon flooding, including oxic conditions within the sediment (Unit I). The pore water shows a salinity increase with depth, inconsistent with the palustrine facies and anoxic bacterial community of the deepest lithological Unit (III). Low magnesium calcite cements in the upper part of Unit III, indicate ancient meteoric diagenesis, while empty cell envelopes of coccoid cyanobacteria in Unit II point to an ancient bloom, not represented in the 16S rRNA analysis. Unit I shows a gradual change from a marine-lagoonal to hypersaline environment, indicated by a shift from a foraminifera to an ostracod dominated environment. Thus, carbonate deposits of small water bodies are subject to frequent changes in diagenetic environments, reflected by three different proxies as partially overlapping but different time scales: (i) sediments reflect ancient processes (ii) pore waters are influenced by recent processes, and (iii) bacterial communities reflect an overlay between ancient and recent processes. To precisely distinguish between these time scales, frequently repeated and spatially variable measurements are necessary.

Data and Resources

This dataset has no data

Cite this as

Fussmann, Dario, von Hoyningen-Huene, Avril, Reimer, Andreas, Schneider, Dominik, Karius, Volker, Riechelmann, Sylvia, Pederson, Chelsea, Swart, Peter K, Daniel, Rolf, Arp, Gernot (2024). Dataset: Decoupling of pore water chemistry, bacterial community profiles, and carbonate mud diagenesis in a land-locked pool on Aldabra (Seychelles, Indian Ocean). https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.927614

DOI retrieved:

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-4.0
Source https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.927614
Author Fussmann, Dario
Given Name Dario
Family Name Fussmann
More Authors
von Hoyningen-Huene, Avril
Reimer, Andreas
Schneider, Dominik
Karius, Volker
Riechelmann, Sylvia
Pederson, Chelsea
Swart, Peter K
Daniel, Rolf
Arp, Gernot
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Fussmann_etal_2021
Subject Areas
Name: Ecology

Name: Lithosphere

Related Identifiers
Title: Decoupling of Pore Water Chemistry, Bacterial Community Profiles, and Carbonate Mud Diagenesis in a Land-Locked Pool on Aldabra (Seychelles, Indian Ocean)
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1080/01490451.2022.2070689
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2022
Source: Geomicrobiology Journal
Authors: Fussmann Dario , von Hoyningen-Huene Avril , Reimer Andreas , Schneider Dominik , Karius Volker , Riechelmann Sylvia , Pederson Chelsea , Swart Peter K , Daniel Rolf , Arp Gernot .