944 resultados para macroalgal abundance


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Results of studies during Project of an international expedition onboard R/V Vladimir Parshin in September-October 2005 are presented. Intensive development of Bacillariophyceae and Dynophyceae was recorded in coastal waters of Bulgaria, Turkey, and in the Danube River delta during period of investigations. Increase in algae population was accompanied by rising of chlorophyll a concentration up to 2.0-5.5 µg/l. In the deep water region it did not exceed 0.5 µg/l. Phytoplankton growth rate in the surface water layer varied from 0.1 to 1.0 1/day. This parameter and NO2+NO3 concentration, as well as the silicon concentration were correlative, as was described by the Michaelis-Menten equation. Phytoplankton growth was affected by basic nutrients. Zooplankton grazing varied from 0.10 to 0.69 1/day and average values in different regions varied by 1.5 times. Microalgae size range is one of major factors of grazing regulation. Rate of phytoplankton consumption was decreasing with increasing the largest diatom Pseudosolenia calcar-avis impact on total biomass of nano- and microphytoplankton.

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Authigenic carbonate mineral distributions are compared to pore-water geochemical profiles and used to evaluate diagenesis within sedimentary sections containing gas hydrates on the Blake Ridge (Ocean Drilling Program Sites 994, 995, and 997). Carbonate mineral distributions reveal three distinct diagenetic zones. (1) Carbonate minerals in the upper 20 m are primarily biogenic and show no evidence of diagenesis. The d13C and d18O values of calcite within this zone reflects marine carbonate (~0 per mil Peedee belemnite [PDB]) formed in equilibrium with seawater. (2) Between 20 and 100 mbsf, calcite d13C values are distinctly negative (as low as -7.0 per mil), and authigenic dolomite is common (~2-40 wt%) with d13C values between -3.6 per mil and 13.7 per mil. (3) Below 100 mbsf, dolomite abundance decreases to trace amounts, and disseminated siderite becomes the pervasive (~2-30 wt%) authigenic carbonate. Both siderite textures and stable isotope values indicate direct precipitation from pore fluids rather than dolomite replacement. The d13C and d18O values of siderite vary from 5.0 per mil to 10.9 per mil and 2.9 per mil to 7.6 per mil, respectively. Comparisons between the d13C profiles of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and pore-water concentration gradients, with the d13C and d18O values of authigenic carbonates, delineate a distinct depth zonation for authigenic carbonate mineral formation. Coincidence of the most negative d13CDIC values (<=-38 per mil) and negative d13C values of both calcite and dolomite, with pore-water alkalinity increases, sulfate depletion, and decreases in interstitial Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations at and below 20 mbsf, suggests that authigenic calcite and dolomite formation is initiated at the base of the sulfate reduction zone (~21 mbsf) and occurs down to ~100 mbsf. Siderite formation apparently occurs between 120 and 450 mbsf; within, and above, the gas hydrate-bearing section of the sediment column (~200-450 mbsf). Siderite d13C and d18O values are nearly uniform from their shallowest occurrence to the bottom of the sedimentary section. However, present-day pore-water d13CDIC values are only similar to siderite d13C values between ~100 and 450 mbsf. Furthermore, calculated equilibrium d18O values of siderite match the measured 18O values of siderite between 120 and 450 mbsf. This interval is characterized by high alkalinity (40-120 mM) and low Ca2+ and Mg2+ concentrations, conditions that are consistent with siderite formation.

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Twenty routinely used nannofossil datums in the late Neogene and Quaternary were identified at three Blake Ridge sites drilled during Leg 164. The quantitative investigation of the nannofossil assemblages in 236 samples selected from Hole 994C provide new biostratigraphic and paleoceanographic information. Although mostly overlooked previously, Umbilicosphaera aequiscutum is an abundant component of the late Neogene flora, and its last occurrence at ~2.3 Ma is a useful new biostratigraphic event. Small Gephyrocapsa evolved within the upper part of Subzone CN11a (~4.3 Ma), and after an initial acme, it temporarily disappeared for 400 k.y., between 2.9 and 2.5 Ma. Medium-sized Gephyrocapsa evolved in the latest Pliocene ~2.2 Ma), and after two short temporary disappearances, common specimens occurred continuously just above the Pliocene/Pleistocene boundary. The base of Subzone CN13b should be recognized as the beginning of the continuous occurrence of medium-sized (>4 µm) Gephyrocapsa. Stratigraphic variation in abundance of the very small placoliths and Florisphaera profunda alternated, indicating potential of the former as a proxy for the paleoproductivity. At this site, it is likely that upwelling took place during three time periods in the late Neogene (6.0-4.6 Ma, 2.3-2.1 Ma, and 2.0-1.8 Ma) and also in the early Pleistocene (1.4-0.9 Ma). Weak upwelling is also likely to have occurred intermittently through the late Pliocene. Due to the sharp and abrupt turnover of the nannofossils, which resulted from an evolution of very competitive species, the paleoproductivity of the late Pleistocene is not clear. The site was mostly in an oligotrophic central gyre setting during the 4.6- to 2.3-Ma interval, intermittently between 2.1 and 1.4 Ma, and continuously for the last several tens of thousand years.