Abstract

We analyzed Mg/Ca ratios of the planktonic species Globigerinoides ruber (white) picked from 49 box core samples covering the whole Mediterranean Sea and 2 core tops from the Atlantic Ocean. Over the entire data set, we found no significant correlation between Mg/Ca and delta(18)O-derived calcification temperatures. This lack of correlation is chiefly due to the presence of an early diagenetic, Mg-rich calcite coating, which can constitute up to 20% of the total shell calcite in the central and eastern Mediterranean basin and result in anomalously high Mg/Ca values and a high scattering. In the western Mediterranean Sea, however, G. ruber Mg/Ca scattering shows smaller amplitude and Mg-rich calcite remains under the XRD detection limit. SEM observations indicate that only a few samples are affected by trace amounts of post-mortem calcite overgrowths (most of this calcite being likely removed during the chemical cleaning for Mg/Ca analyses). Using core top sediments from the western Mediterranean Sea, we performed an empirical calibration exercise, which confirms that G. ruber Mg/Ca is not only related to temperature but it is also significantly affected by sea surface salinity. This salinity effect is not specific to high salinity environments such as the Mediterranean Sea, since it appears to be coherent with recent results obtained on Indo-Pacific and Atlantic surface sediments, which suggest that a +1 (psu) change in SSS results in a +1.7 degrees C Mg/Ca-temperature bias. This sensitivity to salinity is significantly higher than those deduced from culture experiments.

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