Abstract

Surface sediments from seven stations located in the seasonally stratified, frontal and mixed water regions in the Celtic and Irish seas have been analysed for their dinoflagellate cyst assemblages and dinosterol content. A total of 45 dinoflagellate cyst taxa have been identified and the assemblages related to surface and sediment conditions. Sediments from the mixed water region, at 30 m water depth, are characterised by a relatively low cyst concentration (∼2300 cysts/g dry weight) and high relative abundances of Lingulodinium machaerophorum accompanied by Spiniferites membranaceus, Brigantedinium spp. and Dubridinium caperatum. Assemblages from stratified and frontal water stations are dominated by Spiniferites ramosus associated with Operculodinium centrocarpum, Brigantedinium spp., cysts of Polykrikos schwartzii and Selenopemphix quanta. Ordination techniques performed on a restricted number of 35 taxa from the assemblages differentiated the stratified and frontal assemblages based on the abundance of the less abundant species Bitectatodinium tepikiense and Spiniferites elongatus. Among the environmental parameters (sea-surface temperature and salinity, stratification index, chlorophyll concentration and sediment grain-size classes), the seasonal stratification and sedimentological context, itself a function of tidal dynamics, explain most of the variance in the environmental conditions. These results indicate that dinoflagellate cyst analyses of shelf sediment records can be used to document the planktonic signal of seasonal stratification dynamics.

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