Abstract

The complex topography of submarine canyons may result in different composition of benthic foraminifera assemblages. To understand how trophic, hydrological and sedimentological conditions in submarine canyons can influence the distribution of benthic foraminifera, and to use this information to corroborate paleoenvironmental interpretations for the Holocene, we investigated recent benthic foraminiferal assemblages (total fauna >63 μm) and sedimentological data in two canyons (CANWN and CAND) in the Espírito Santo Basin (ESB) between 18°20′ and 21°20′ S. Surface sediment samples (0–2 cm) were collected inside the canyons (150 to 1300 m water depth) and in shelf-slope adjacent transects (50 to 1300 m water depth). The density, taxonomic diversity, and assemblage composition of benthic foraminifera change with depth and location. The distinct ecological preferences of the most abundant taxa allowed us to recognize five benthic foraminiferal groups. Three groups (V, III, and I) are present in different bathymetric sectors; Group V: outer shelf (50 m), Group III: upper, and middle – lower slope (150 to 400 m), and Group I: middle – lower slope (1000 to 1300 m). Groups II and IV show no characteristic bathymetric distribution and are present only in CAND and in CANWN, respectively. Group V consists of Hanzawaia boueana, Peneroplis planatus, and Quinqueloculina lamarckiana; Group III is dominated by Globocassidulina rossensis and Trifarina spp.; Group I consists of Globocassidulina crassa, Bolivina lowmani, Gavelinopsis versiformis, Alabaminella weddellensis, and Epistominella exigua. The main species in Group II (CAND, 150, 1000 to 1300 m) are Trifarina angulosa, Globocassidulina subglobosa, and Discorbis vilardeboanus. Group IV (middle – lower CANWN, 1000 to 1300 m), consists mainly of agglutinated species Glomospira charoides, Rhabdammina abyssorum, and Psammosphaera fusca. Our data suggest that the quantity (and quality) of food supply, hydrodynamic conditions and sediment properties are the main drivers controlling the bathymetric distribution of benthic foraminiferal assemblages in both canyons. The middle – lower CANNW revealed unstable trophic conditions, related to terrigenous sediment input due to turbidity currents. In CAND, the foraminiferal assemblages ecology indicated sufficient organic matter supply that favors species establishment and diversity, indicating a more productive and less unstable environment than in CANWN.

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