Opzioni
Ostracod and Foraminifer Responses to Late Pleistocene–Holocene Volcanic Activity in Northern Victoria Land as Recorded in Ross Sea (Antarctica) Marine Sediments
2023
Periodico
GEOSCIENCES
Abstract
The impacts on ostracods and foraminifers caused by three Late Quaternary ashfalls of
different intensities and recovered in the ANTA02-NW2 core sediments (Drygalski Basin, western
Ross Sea) were analysed for the first time. Albeit with different timing, both associations demonstrated
similar response patterns associated with the deposition of material from volcanic eruptions.
In particular, based on the palaeontological evidence, it was possible to divide the cores into four
intervals/phases recording the evolution of the ecosystem before and after the deposition events: (1)
Pre-extinction phase (high abundance and high diversity values). (2) Extinction phase, characterised
by the complete disappearance of ostracod fauna; the foraminiferal assemblage, although not entirely
absent, records extremely low values of abundance and diversity (survivor assemblage). (3)
Recovery phase (increasing abundance and diversity values), characterised by the recolonisation of
some opportunistic taxa; species such as Australicythere devexa and Australicythere polylyca dominate
the ostracod assemblage. (4) Post-extinction phase (high abundance and high diversity values), with
the return to an environmental equilibrium characterised by the colonisation of specialised taxa such
as Argilloecia sp., Cytheropteron sp., Echinocythereis sp., and Hemicytherura spp. Our results may aid
in the understanding of how communities (i.e., ostracods and foraminifers) recovered after the impact
of direct deposits of volcanic ash into ocean waters. The mechanisms by which disappearance
and/or mortality was induced are still not clear. The release of toxic metals during the reaction of
the volcanic ash with seawater, the resulting chemical alteration in the seawater, and the change in
pH, together with the possible suppression of planktonic organisms, may have caused the two main
extinction phases recorded by the ANTA02-NW2 core sediments.
Diritti
open access
license:creative commons
license uri:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/