Coccolithus pelagicus, a productivity proxy related to moderate fronts off Western Iberia

2000 
Abstract The traditional interpretation of Coccolithus pelagicus as a cold water proxy is examined based on its distribution patterns in the water column off the Portuguese coast (using data from eleven cruises) and in Holocene surface sediment samples and Quaternary cores from the same region. Coccolithus pelagicus is common in the Portuguese upwelling system, an area where surface waters are predominantly of subtropical origin. Although revealing an affinity for low temperature upwelled waters, the species was found in waters up to 18°C associated with riverine plume and shelf-break fronts. C. pelagicus seemed to consistently occupy a particular ecological niche, between other phytoplankton groups, related to moderate turbulence conditions combined with nutrient availability. From this behaviour, it is proposed that C. pelagicus can be used as a tracer of the periphery of areas of enhanced productivity. Coccolithus pelagicus preferences for fronts of moderate temperature and salinity gradients are tentatively used to explain particular features of its sedimentary record. The repeated increase of C. pelagicus in thanatocoenoses (surface sediment assemblages) close to three river mouths, on the Portuguese shelf, are interpreted as a positive response to the development of riverine plumes. On the other hand, inconsistencies in the correlation between sea surface cooler-glacial and warmer-interglacial isotope stages and the relative abundance pattern of C. pelagicus during the Late Quaternary, as registered in two Galicia Bank piston cores (42°N), are tentatively explained in terms of shifts in the extent of the outer limit of the local palaeoproductivity belt off the Iberian Peninsula.
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