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Oxygen control on Holocene cold-water coral development in the eastern Mediterranean Sea

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Fink, H. G., Wienberg, C., Hebbeln, D., McGregor, H. V., Schmiedl, G., Taviani, M., et al. (2012). Oxygen control on Holocene cold-water coral development in the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Deep-Sea Research Part I-Oceanographic Research Papers, 62, 89-96. doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2011.12.013.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0026-A3FB-6
Abstract
Continuous sedimentary records from an eastern Mediterranean cold-water coral ecosystem thriving in intermediate water depths (similar to 600 m) reveal a temporary extinction of cold-water corals during the Early to Mid Holocene from 11.4-5.9 cal kyr BP. Benthic foraminiferal assemblage analysis shows low-oxygen conditions of 2 ml l(-1) during the same period, compared to bottom-water oxygen values of 4-5 ml l(-1) before and after the coral-free interval. The timing of the corals' demise coincides with the sapropel Si event, during which the deep eastern Mediterranean basin turned anoxic. Our results show that during the sapropel Si event low oxygen conditions extended to the rather shallow depths of our study site in the Ionian Sea and caused the cold-water corals temporary extinction. This first evidence for the sensitivity of cold-water corals to low oceanic oxygen contents suggests that the projected expansion of tropical oxygen minimum zones resulting from global change will threaten cold-water coral ecosystems in low latitudes in the same way that ocean acidification will do in the higher latitudes. (c) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.