Abstract

Coastal marine settings are important in terms of geochemical cycles and biological productivity. Climate change is predicted to affect coastal environment via hypoxia and Submarine Groundwater Discharge (SGD). Appropriate proxies could help to better understand oxygenation history and the role of SGD in regulating hypoxia. This would also benefit prediction of potential outcomes of future environmental changes. The sensitivity of benthic foraminiferal shell chemistry to environmental conditions opens the possibility to use them as proxies of coastal hypoxia and SGD. We report here that the average Mn/Ca ratios in tests of living benthic foraminiferal shells in the Changjiang River Estuary (CJE) is 2.3 times higher during hypoxia periods than under well-mixed conditions. In addition, Ba/Ca ratios in living benthic foraminiferal shells co-varied well with radon-inferred SGD signals. Fluctuations of Mn/Ca and Ba/Ca ratios in tests of a single foraminiferal shell along successive chambers corresponds well with seasonal-scale variations of hypoxia and SGD. We suggest that Mn/Ca and Ba/Ca ratios within intra-tests of benthic foraminifer can provide a reliable proxy for past hypoxia and SGD trends.

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