s'authentifier
version française rss feed
HAL : hal-00452414, version 1

Fiche détaillée  Récupérer au format
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems 6, 8 (2005) 1-15
The shell of the Great Scallop Pecten maximus as a high frequency archive of paleoenvironmental change
Laurent Chauvaud 1, Anne Lorrain ( ) 1, 2, Robert B. Dunbar 3, Yves-Marie Paulet 1, Gérard Thouzeau 1, Frédéric Jean 1, Jean-Marc Guarini 4, David A. Mucciarone 3
(02/08/2005)

We investigate the environmental and biological controls on oxygen isotope ratios in the shells of modern Pecten maximus bivalves collected alive in the bay of Brest (France). Seasonal δ18O profiles obtained by drilling the daily calcite ridges deposited at the surface of the left valve were compared with in situ measurements of temperature and salinity. We show that P. maximus δ18O values accurately track seasonal variations in bottom water temperature. Shell growth rate has no significant effect on shell δ18O values. Our study demonstrates that daily variations in water temperature can be reconstructed within about 0.5°C. Temperatures estimated with the paleotemperature equation established in this study, were compared with temperatures derived from previously published equations. The comparison indicates that the most commonly used paleotemperature equation for biogenic calcite [Epstein et al., 1953] provides inaccurate temperature estimates, but the Kim and O'Neil [1997] equation, established from abiogenic calcite precipitation, provides results very similar to ours, and should therefore be used for scallop individuals coming from populations where proper empirical calibration cannot be done. Pecten maximus bivalves precipitate calcite in isotopic equilibrium with seawater, produce large daily growth striae, are stenohaline and are well preserved in archeological and geological deposits making them an excellent high frequency archive of paleoenvironmental change.
1 :  Laboratoire des Sciences de l'Environnement Marin (LEMAR)
Institut Universitaire Européen de la Mer (IUEM) – Université de Bretagne Occidentale [UBO] – CNRS : UMR6539 – Institut de Recherche pour le Développement
2 :  Thons tropicaux et écosystèmes pélagiques : taxies, interactions et stratégies d'exploitation (THETIS)
Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] : UR109
3 :  Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences [Stanford] (GES)
Stanford University
4 :  Laboratoire d'océanographie biologique de Banyuls (LOBB)
CNRS : UMR7621 – INSU – Université Pierre et Marie Curie [UPMC] - Paris VI
Sciences de l'environnement
Liste des fichiers attachés à ce document : 
PDF
ChauvaudetalG3revised.pdf(2.2 MB)