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A biological origin for climate signals in corals—Trace element “vital effects” are ubiquitous in Scleractinian coral skeletons
Author(s) -
Sinclair D. J.,
Williams B.,
Risk M.
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1029/2006gl027183
Subject(s) - coral , porites , reef , oceanography , geology , zooxanthellae , coral reef , scleractinia , ecology , cnidaria , biology , paleontology , symbiosis , bacteria
Laser ablation ICP/MS was used to analyze Mg, Sr and U at fine (hundreds of microns) and seasonal spatial scales in the reef coral Porites and the non‐photosynthetic “deep‐sea” corals Lophelia , Oculina , and Desmophyllum . Tropical corals display strong seasonal correlations between Mg, Sr and U, even when normal cycles are perturbed by unknown factors. An inverse relationship between Mg and U is a universal feature of all the corals, but is much larger in deep corals despite stable environmental conditions. This correlation originates from two aragonitic skeletal types: Mg‐rich opaque centers of calcification, and U‐rich large translucent crystals. The Mg‐rich material probably precipitates rapidly and corresponds to materials strongly deficient in 18 O and 13 C compared to isotopic equilibrium. Combined, these observations imply that varying proportions of the two skeletal types may account for most of the “temperature” or “climate” signal in tropical corals, as well as anomalous “vital effects”.