Drake passage benthic foraminiferal abundance during the last deglaciation

The Antarctic Cold Reversal (ACR; 14.7 to 13 ka) phase of the last deglaciation saw a pause in the rise of atmospheric pCO2 and Antarctic temperature, contrasted with warming in the North. Mechanisms associated with interhemispheric heat transfer have been proposed to explain features of this event, but the response of marine biota and the carbon cycle are debated. The Southern Ocean is a key site of deep-water exchange with the atmosphere, hence deglacial changes in nutrient cycling, circulation, and productivity in this region may have global impact. Here we present a new perspective on the sequence of events in the deglacial Southern Ocean, that includes multi-faunal benthic assemblage (foraminifera and cold-water corals) and geochemical data (Ba/Ca, 14C, δ11B) from the Drake Passage. Our records feature anomalies during peak ACR conditions indicative of circulation, biogeochemistry, and regional ecosystem perturbations. Within this cold episode, peak abundances of thick-walled benthic foraminifera and cold-water corals are observed at shallow depths in the sub-Antarctic (~300 m), while coral populations at greater depths and further south diminished. Geochemical data indicate that habitat shifts were associated with enhanced primary productivity in the sub-Antarctic, a more stratified water column, and poorly oxygenated bottom water. These results are consistent with northward migration of primary production in response to Antarctic cooling and widespread biotic turnover across the Southern Ocean. We suggest that expanding sea ice, suppressed ventilation, and shifting centres of upwelling drove changes in planktic and benthic ecology, and were collectively instrumental in halting CO2 rise in the mid-deglaciation.

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Cite this as

Stewart, Joseph A, Li, Tao, Spooner, Peter T, Burke, Andrea, Chen, Tianyu, Roberts, Jenny, Rae, James W B, Peck, Victoria L, Kender, Sev, Liu, Qian, Robinson, Laura F (2020). Dataset: Drake passage benthic foraminiferal abundance during the last deglaciation. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.924097

DOI retrieved: 2020

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 30, 2024
Last update November 30, 2024
License CC-BY-4.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.924097
Author Stewart, Joseph A
Given Name Joseph A
Family Name Stewart
More Authors
Li, Tao
Spooner, Peter T
Burke, Andrea
Chen, Tianyu
Roberts, Jenny
Rae, James W B
Peck, Victoria L
Kender, Sev
Liu, Qian
Robinson, Laura F
Source Creation 2020
Publication Year 2020
Resource Type text/tab-separated-values - filename: Stewart-etal_2020_BenthForams
Subject Areas
Name: BiologicalClassification

Name: Paleontology

Related Identifiers
Title: Productivity and Dissolved Oxygen Controls on the Southern Ocean Deep‐Sea Benthos During the Antarctic Cold Reversal
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1029/2021PA004288
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2021
Source: Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Authors: Stewart Joseph A , Li Tao , Spooner Peter T , Burke Andrea , Chen Tianyu , Roberts Jenny , Rae James W B , Peck Victoria L , Kender Sev , Liu Qian , Robinson Laura F .