Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Diatoms as indicators of environmental change in flowing waters and lakes
- Part III Diatoms as indicators in extreme environments
- Part IV Diatoms as indicators in marine and estuarine environments
- 13 Diatoms as indicators of coastal paleoenvironments and relative sea-level change
- 14 Diatoms and environmental change in brackish waters
- 15 Applied diatom studies in estuaries and shallow coastal environments
- 16 Estuarine paleoenvironmental reconstructions using diatoms
- 17 Diatoms and marine paleoceanography
- Part V Other applications
- Part VI Conclusions
- Glossary, and acronyms
- Index
17 - Diatoms and marine paleoceanography
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Diatoms as indicators of environmental change in flowing waters and lakes
- Part III Diatoms as indicators in extreme environments
- Part IV Diatoms as indicators in marine and estuarine environments
- 13 Diatoms as indicators of coastal paleoenvironments and relative sea-level change
- 14 Diatoms and environmental change in brackish waters
- 15 Applied diatom studies in estuaries and shallow coastal environments
- 16 Estuarine paleoenvironmental reconstructions using diatoms
- 17 Diatoms and marine paleoceanography
- Part V Other applications
- Part VI Conclusions
- Glossary, and acronyms
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Diatoms have great potential for studies of marine paleoecology and paleoceanography, especially in high latitudes and coastal regions. In these settings they are diverse and abundant, usually being the dominant group in the fossil assemblage. Elsewhere, their use may be limited by the relatively poor preservation of biogenic silica. The red clays of the central oceanic gyres contain no diatoms at all; most calcareous sediments contain only fragments of a few robust forms.
The poor preservation results from two interrelated conditions. (i) Diatoms as a group are at a competitive disadvantage in conditions of low nutrient supply. In addition to the universal requirement for nitrogen and phosphorus, they will be limited by availability of silicon, and trace metals such as iron may be limiting also (Martin & Gordon, 1988; Coale et al., 1996). Therefore, over large areas of the world ocean, diatoms are a minor component of the phytoplankton, and those taxa which are present are frequently very weaklysilicified. (ii) Seawater and sediment porewaters are usually undersaturated with respect to biogenic silica (Tréguer et al., 1995), so that dissolution of the frustules occurs rapidly, especially when pH is relatively high, as it often is in calcareous sediments. Preservation is good only in sediments with a high component of rock particles (ice-rafted detritus, coastal sediments, volcanic ash beds) or in siliceous (diatom) oozes, which result from a combination of high rates of diatom production and exclusion of other sediment components.
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- Information
- The DiatomsApplications for the Environmental and Earth Sciences, pp. 374 - 386Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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