Abstract

Dissolution of carbonate platforms, like The Bahamas, throughout Quaternary sea-level oscillations have created mature karst landscapes that can include sinkholes and off-shore blue holes. These karst features are flooded by saline oceanic waters and meteoric-influenced groundwaters, which creates unique groundwater environments and ecosystems. Little is known about the modern benthic meiofauna, like foraminifera, in these environments or how internal hydrographic characteristics of salinity, dissolved oxygen, or pH may influence benthic habitat viability. Here we compare the total benthic foraminiferal distributions in sediment-water interface samples collected from <2 m water depth on the carbonate tidal flats, and the two subtidal blue holes Freshwater River Blue Hole and Meredith’s Blue Hole, on the leeward margin of Great Abaco Island, The Bahamas. All samples are dominated by miliolid foraminifera (i.e., Quinqueloculina and Triloculina), yet notable differences emerge in the secondary taxa between these two environments that allows identification of two assemblages: a Carbonate Tidal Flats Assemblage (CTFA) vs. a Blue Hole Assemblage (BHA). The CTFA includes abundant common shallow-water lagoon foraminifera (e.g., Peneroplis, Rosalina, Rotorbis), while the BHA has higher proportions of foraminifera that are known to tolerate stressful environmental conditions of brackish and dysoxic waters elsewhere (e.g., Pseudoeponides, Cribroelphidium, Ammonia). We also observe how the hydrographic differences between subtidal blue holes can promote different benthic habitats for foraminifera, and this is observed through differences in both agglutinated and hyaline fauna. The unique hydrographic conditions in subtidal blue holes make them great laboratories for assessing the response of benthic foraminiferal communities to extreme environmental conditions (e.g., low pH, dysoxia).

Highlights

  • Blue holes and sinkholes are common geomorphologic features on carbonate landscapes on low elevation eogenetic carbonate platforms like The Bahamas

  • This study examines total distributions of benthic foraminifera in two subtidal blue holes in the carbonate tidal flat environment located on the leeward margin of Great Abaco Island, The Bahamas: Freshwater River Blue Hole (FRSH) and Meredith’s Blue Hole (MERE)

  • Our new results identify new benthic foraminiferal assemblages in the Carbonate Tidal Flats (CTFA), and the subtidal Blue Holes (BHA). Both benthic foraminiferal assemblages are dominated by porcelaneous miliolid taxa like Triloculina and Quinqueloculina, which exceed 50% in proportional abundance in individual samples

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Summary

Introduction

Blue holes and sinkholes are common geomorphologic features on carbonate landscapes on low elevation eogenetic carbonate platforms like The Bahamas. They are commonly created by cave ceiling collapse, combined with flooding by deglacial sea-level rise, and concomitant vertical migration of local groundwater systems (Cole, 1910; Shinn et al, 1996; van Hengstum et al, 2011). Blue hole stratigraphic infill can preserve unique records of terrestrial ecology (Kjellmark, 1996; Steadman et al, 2007; Sullivan et al, 2020; Fall et al, 2021), hurricane activity (Lane et al, 2011; Wallace et al, 2019; Winkler et al, 2020; Wang et al, 2021), and physicochemical changes of the local groundwater in response to climate forcing (Teeter, 1995; van Hengstum et al, 2010; Peros et al, 2017). It remains unclear if unique hydrographic conditions promote a unique foraminiferal habitat, or, if transported individuals from the adjacent marine environments including carbonate lagoons and mangroves are the primary control on resultant benthic foraminiferal total assemblages

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