Abstract

Abstract. In geological outcrops and drill cores from reef frameworks, the skeletons of scleractinian corals are usually leached and more or less completely transformed into sparry calcite because the highly porous skeletons formed of metastable aragonite (CaCO3) undergo rapid diagenetic alteration. Upon alteration, ghost structures of the distinct annual growth bands often allow for reconstructions of annual extension ( = growth) rates, but information on skeletal density needed for reconstructions of calcification rates is invariably lost. This report presents the bulk density, extension rates and calcification rates of fossil reef corals which underwent minor diagenetic alteration only. The corals derive from unlithified shallow water carbonates of the Florida platform (south-eastern USA), which formed during four interglacial sea level highstands dated approximately 3.2, 2.9, 1.8, and 1.2 Ma in the mid-Pliocene to early Pleistocene. With regard to the preservation, the coral skeletons display smooth growth surfaces with minor volumes of marine aragonite cement within intra-skeletal porosity. Within the skeletal structures, voids are commonly present along centres of calcification which lack secondary cements. Mean extension rates were 0.44 ± 0.19 cm yr−1 (range 0.16 to 0.86 cm yr−1), mean bulk density was 0.96 ± 0.36 g cm−3 (range 0.55 to 1.83 g cm−3) and calcification rates ranged from 0.18 to 0.82 g cm−2 yr−1 (mean 0.38 ± 0.16 g cm−2 yr−1), values which are 50 % of modern shallow-water reef corals. To understand the possible mechanisms behind these low calcification rates, we compared the fossil calcification rates with those of modern zooxanthellate corals (z corals) from the Western Atlantic (WA) and Indo-Pacific calibrated against sea surface temperature (SST). In the fossil data, we found a widely analogous relationship with SST in z corals from the WA, i.e. density increases and extension rate decreases with increasing SST, but over a significantly larger temperature window during the Plio-Pleistocene. With regard to the environment of coral growth, stable isotope proxy data from the fossil corals and the overall structure of the ancient shallow marine communities are consistent with a well-mixed, open marine environment similar to the present-day Florida Reef Tract, but variably affected by intermittent upwelling. Upwelling along the platform may explain low rates of reef coral calcification and inorganic cementation, but is too localised to account also for low extension rates of Pliocene z corals throughout the tropical WA region. Low aragonite saturation on a more global scale in response to rapid glacial–interglacial CO2 cyclicity is also a potential factor, but Plio-Pleistocene atmospheric pCO2 is generally believed to have been broadly similar to the present day. Heat stress related to globally high interglacial SST only episodically moderated by intermittent upwelling affecting the Florida platform seems to be another likely reason for low calcification rates. From these observations we suggest some present coral reef systems to be endangered from future ocean warming.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Architecture of the zooxanthellate coral skeleton and systematics of skeletal calcificationThe skeleton of zooxanthellate corals (z corals) is a highly organised, porous hard tissue formed of mineral CaCO3

  • sea surface water temperature (SST) estimates for the Pliocene and Pleistocene interglacial units have been retrieved from δ18O values from the reef corals Solenastrea and Orbicella and assuming a modern seawater value for δ18O (δ18Owater) at the Florida Reef Tract (FRT)

  • The latter does imply some dissolution has occurred, and subtle reductions of skeletal density, since dissolution at the centres of calcification (COC) has been reported from recent specimens (Perrin, 2004), this effect may be present in the data from recent corals

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Summary

Introduction

1.1 Architecture of the zooxanthellate coral skeleton and systematics of skeletal calcification. The skeletons of scleractinian corals and other sedimentary grains composed originally of metastable aragonite (CaCO3) usually form moldic porosity, or are more or less completely replaced by mosaics of blocky calcite spar (Schroeder and Purser, 1986) These secondary alterations generally pose no problem for classical approaches in palaeoecology and taxonomy, all information stored as isotope and geochemical proxy data have been reset and makes the corals no longer available as environmental or geochronological archives. Following infilling by late diagenetic calcite spar, this differential dissolution process leaves records of growth bands from which skeletal extension can be retrieved (Brachert et al, 2006b; Johnson and Pérez, 2006; Shinn, 1966) This process of dissolution and subsequent cementation of moldic and intra-particle porosity tends to destroy all information pertaining to skeletal density. This study complements two previous papers using sclerochronology of bivalves and z corals for reconstructions of the paleoenvironments and long-term changes of seasonality in southern Florida (Brachert et al, 2014, 2016) and provides a discussion of the quantitative data in the context of recent global z coral calcification patterns

The Florida Platform during the Plio-Pleistocene interglacials
Materials
Methods
15 Mule Pen Quarry
Preservation
Calcification
Significance of the calcification data
Descriptive patterns of calcification in recent and fossil z corals
Comparative analysis of fossil and recent z coral calcification
Florida and Western Atlantic
Indo-Pacific
Lessons from the recent analogue
Low calcification rates due to high nutrients or low aragonite saturation?
Low calcification rates due to heat stress?
Conclusions
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