Benthic foraminifera of the Red Sea

The distribution of living (Rose Bengal-stained), dead and fossil benthic foraminifera was investigated in six short cores (multicores, 30-32 cm total length) recovered from the central Red Sea. The ecological preferences as well as the relationship between the live and dead/fossil assemblages (preserved down-core) were examined. The sites, located along a W-E profile and between the depth of 366 and 1782 m, extend from the center of the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ, ~200-650 m), through its margin at ~600 m, and down to the well-aerated deep-water environment. Live (Rose-Bengal stained) and coexisting dead foraminifera were studied in the upper 5 cm of each of the sites, and the fossil record was studied down to ~32 cm. Q-mode Principal Component Analysis was used and four distinct foraminiferal fossil assemblages were determined. These assemblages follow different water mass properties. In the center of the OMZ, where the organic carbon content is highest and the oxygen concentration is lowest (1500 m), characterized by the most oxygenated and oligotrophic seafloor conditions, is associated with the Astrononion sp. A-Hanzawaia sp. A assemblage. Throughout the Red Sea extremely high values of temperature and salinity are constant below ~200 m depth, but the flux of organic matter to the sea floor varies considerably with bathymetry and appears to be the main controlling factor governing the distribution pattern of the benthic foraminifera. Comparison between live and the dead/fossil assemblages reveals a large difference between the two. Processes that may control this difference include species-specific high turnover rates, and preferential predation and loss of fragile taxa (either by chemical or microbial processes). Significant variations in the degree of loss of the organic-cemented agglutinants were observed down core. This group is preserved down to 5-10 cm at the shallow OMZ sites and down to greater depths at well-aerated and oligotrophic sites. The lower rate of disintegration of these forms, in the deeper locations of the Red Sea, may be related to low microbial activity. This results in the preservation of increasing numbers of organic-cemented shells down-core.

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Edelman-Furstenberg, Yael, Scherbacher, Maria, Hemleben, Christoph, Almogi-Labin, Ahuva (2001). Dataset: Benthic foraminifera of the Red Sea. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.734150

DOI retrieved: 2001

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Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.734150
Author Edelman-Furstenberg, Yael
Given Name Yael
Family Name Edelman-Furstenberg
More Authors
Scherbacher, Maria
Hemleben, Christoph
Almogi-Labin, Ahuva
Source Creation 2001
Publication Year 2001
Resource Type application/zip - filename: Edelmann-Furstenberg_2001
Subject Areas
Name: Paleontology

Related Identifiers
Title: Deep-sea benthic foraminifera from the central Red Sea
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.2113/0310048
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2001
Source: Journal of Foraminiferal Research
Authors: Edelman-Furstenberg Yael , Scherbacher Maria , Hemleben Christoph , Almogi-Labin Ahuva .