Radiolaria as a reflection of environmental conditions in the eastern and southern sectors of the Indian Ocean: A new statistical approach

John Rogers*, Patrick De Deckker

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    31 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Cluster analysis and species abundance plots of radiolarian abundance counts from core tops from the eastern Indian Ocean between 12° S and 31° S, and the southern Indian Ocean between 31° S and 62.5° S, demonstrate the existence of environmentally-related provinces supporting distinct taxa assemblages. These provinces are closely associated with currents in the eastern sector of the Indian Ocean and with fronts in the southern sector. The radiolarian assemblages correlate strongly with salinity-normalised total alkalinity (NTA) at the sea-surface, with temperature, salinity, and density from the sea-surface to 300 m, and with dissolved oxygen and nitrate and phosphate concentrations from the sea-surface to 100 m. Palaeo-reconstructions of these parameters at the sea-surface have been made for six Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) samples from five eastern Indian Ocean cores. The LGM sea-surface temperature estimates are comparable with those based on planktonic foraminiferal counts of the same samples obtained by other researchers. The reconstructions show that, since the LGM, density increased markedly along the Western Australian coast south of 20° S but changed little further from the Western Australian coast. By contrast, phosphate concentrations were marginally lower than modern values along the Western Australian coast south of 20° S but more than twice modern values in the other LGM samples. The utility of various regression and calibration techniques is discussed. It is concluded that, probably due to the effects of differences in radiolarian habitat, ocean currents, and/or environmental gradients, only one method, weighted averaging - partial least squares, is reliable in a study area of this size and complexity. If other methods are to be used, the study area must be partitioned into at least two separate regions with the major split between the eastern and southern sectors of the Indian Ocean.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)137-162
    Number of pages26
    JournalMarine Micropaleontology
    Volume65
    Issue number3-4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 5 Dec 2007

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