Abstract

Abstract. It has long been assumed that the population dynamics of planktonic foraminifera is characterised by synchronous reproduction associated with ontogenetic vertical migration. However, due to contradictory observations, this concept became controversial, and subsequent studies provided evidence both in favour and against these phenomena. Here we present new observations from replicated vertically resolved profiles of abundance and shell size variation in four species of planktonic foraminifera from the tropical Atlantic to test for the presence, pattern, and extent of synchronised reproduction and ontogenetic vertical migration in this oceanic region. Specimens of Globigerinita glutinata, Globigerinoides ruber ruber, Globorotalia menardii and Orbulina universa were collected over the first 700 m resolved at nine depth intervals at nine stations over a period of 14 d. Dead specimens were systematically observed irrespective of the depth interval, sampling day and size. Conversely, specimens in the smaller size fractions dominated the sampled populations at all times and were recorded at all depths, indicating that reproduction might have occurred continuously and throughout the occupied part of the water column. However, a closer look at the vertical and temporal size distribution of specimens within each species revealed an overrepresentation of large specimens in depths at the beginning of the sampling (shortly after the full moon) and an overrepresentation of small individuals at the surface and subsurface by the end of the sampling (around new moon). These observations imply that a disproportionately large portion of the population followed for each species a canonical reproductive trajectory, which involved synchronised reproduction and ontogenetic vertical migration with the descent of progressively maturing individuals. This concept is consistent with the initial observations from the Red Sea, on which the reproductive dynamics of planktonic foraminifera has been modelled. Our data extend this model to non-spinose and microperforate symbiont-bearing species, but contrary to the extension of the initial observations on other species of foraminifera, we cannot provide evidence for ontogenetic vertical migration with ascent during maturation. We also show that more than half of the population does not follow the canonical trajectory, which helps to reconcile the existing contrasting observations. Our results imply that the flux of empty shells of planktonic foraminifera in the open ocean should be pulsed, with disproportionately large amounts of disproportionately large specimens being delivered in pulses caused by synchronised reproduction. The presence of a large population reproducing outside of the canonical trajectory implies that individual foraminifera in a fossil sample will record in the calcite of their shells a range of habitat trajectories, with the canonical trajectory emerging statistically from a substantial background range.

Highlights

  • The concept of synchronous reproduction followed by a predictable adjustment of depth habitat during ontogeny has been the paradigm of population dynamics in planktonic foraminifera for more than half a century

  • The results suggest that about 75 % of O. universa may follow the canonical trajectory of synchronised reproduction and the ontogenetic vertical migration (OVM), but based on much larger sample sizes and offering more reliable estimates, more than 50 % of G. menardii and up to 70 % of G. glutinata and G. ruber ruber do not appear to take part in synchronised reproduction, and about 50 % of G. glutinata and more than 60 % of G. menardii and G. ruber ruber do not appear to migrate vertically during ontogeny in the same way as the canonical trajectory

  • The first from a tropical openocean setting, we were able to test for the existence of a synchronised reproduction and ontogenetic vertical migration in four symbiont-bearing species of planktonic foraminifera representing all three main clades

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of synchronous reproduction followed by a predictable adjustment of depth habitat during ontogeny (ontogenetic vertical migration) has been the paradigm of population dynamics in planktonic foraminifera for more than half a century. J. Meilland et al.: Population dynamics and reproduction strategies of planktonic foraminifera sition in the water column where the final chambers of the shells with their wealth of geochemical proxies have been produced The paradigm is tightly linked with the notion that planktonic foraminifera are obligate sexual outbreeders (Hemleben et al, 1989). This unusual reproductive strategy among unicellular plankton is congruent with, and perhaps even reliant on, the temporally and spatially coordinated release of gametes (Weinkauf et al, 2020)

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