The Distribution Coefficients of Major and Minor Elements in Coral Skeletons Under Variable Calcium Seawater Concentrations

Coral skeletons are one of the best archives for past ocean seawater (SW) chemistry and isotopes. However, the distribution coefficients of major and minor elements in coral skeletons are not well determined. In this study, we launched an experiment to determine the distribution coefficients of mult...

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Main Authors: Sharon Ram, Jonathan Erez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Earth Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2021.657176/full
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spelling doaj-5d027cf3fd2d47179ca6f3f62ac73dce2021-05-26T05:41:45ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Earth Science2296-64632021-05-01910.3389/feart.2021.657176657176The Distribution Coefficients of Major and Minor Elements in Coral Skeletons Under Variable Calcium Seawater ConcentrationsSharon RamJonathan ErezCoral skeletons are one of the best archives for past ocean seawater (SW) chemistry and isotopes. However, the distribution coefficients of major and minor elements in coral skeletons are not well determined. In this study, we launched an experiment to determine the distribution coefficients of multiple elements in corals’ skeletons by changing Ca concentrations in SW (CaSW). Two scleractinian corals, Pocillopora damicornis and Acropora cervicornis were cultured in modified Gulf of Eilat water (Red-Sea) with CaSW of approximately 10, 15, 20, and 25 mM. After almost three months, the newly grown skeletons were analyzed for the following elements: Li, Na, Mg, K, Sr, and Ba. Their ratios to Ca in the coral skeleton (El/Cacoral) increased linearly with El/CaSW (with R2 values above 0.98), crossing the origin and thus indicating constant distribution coefficient for each element over the experimental range of El/CaSW. The values of DEl were in good agreement with values reported for corals collected in natural seawater. However, differences were observed between the two species, and both were slightly deviating from inorganic aragonite D values. These deviations are well explained by Rayleigh fractionation process in the calcifying fluid (assuming it is mainly seawater). This was observed both for elements with D > 1 (Ba and Sr) and D < 1 (Li, Mg, Na, and K). P. damicornis showed open system behavior (∼20% of its Ca utilized) while A. cervicornis showed more closed calcifying reservoir (∼50% of its Ca utilized). The finding that the distribution coefficients of the six minor and trace elements are constant for a given species, should help in the reconstruction of past seawater chemistry based on multielement measurements in fossil corals. In particular, Na/Cacoral can be used to reconstruct past ocean Ca concentrations and with El/Cacoral ratios for other elements, their concentrations for the Cenozoic can be reconstructed.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2021.657176/fullcoral calcificationtrace elementsdistribution coefficientRayleigh fractionationseawater paleochemistry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sharon Ram
Jonathan Erez
spellingShingle Sharon Ram
Jonathan Erez
The Distribution Coefficients of Major and Minor Elements in Coral Skeletons Under Variable Calcium Seawater Concentrations
Frontiers in Earth Science
coral calcification
trace elements
distribution coefficient
Rayleigh fractionation
seawater paleochemistry
author_facet Sharon Ram
Jonathan Erez
author_sort Sharon Ram
title The Distribution Coefficients of Major and Minor Elements in Coral Skeletons Under Variable Calcium Seawater Concentrations
title_short The Distribution Coefficients of Major and Minor Elements in Coral Skeletons Under Variable Calcium Seawater Concentrations
title_full The Distribution Coefficients of Major and Minor Elements in Coral Skeletons Under Variable Calcium Seawater Concentrations
title_fullStr The Distribution Coefficients of Major and Minor Elements in Coral Skeletons Under Variable Calcium Seawater Concentrations
title_full_unstemmed The Distribution Coefficients of Major and Minor Elements in Coral Skeletons Under Variable Calcium Seawater Concentrations
title_sort distribution coefficients of major and minor elements in coral skeletons under variable calcium seawater concentrations
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Earth Science
issn 2296-6463
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Coral skeletons are one of the best archives for past ocean seawater (SW) chemistry and isotopes. However, the distribution coefficients of major and minor elements in coral skeletons are not well determined. In this study, we launched an experiment to determine the distribution coefficients of multiple elements in corals’ skeletons by changing Ca concentrations in SW (CaSW). Two scleractinian corals, Pocillopora damicornis and Acropora cervicornis were cultured in modified Gulf of Eilat water (Red-Sea) with CaSW of approximately 10, 15, 20, and 25 mM. After almost three months, the newly grown skeletons were analyzed for the following elements: Li, Na, Mg, K, Sr, and Ba. Their ratios to Ca in the coral skeleton (El/Cacoral) increased linearly with El/CaSW (with R2 values above 0.98), crossing the origin and thus indicating constant distribution coefficient for each element over the experimental range of El/CaSW. The values of DEl were in good agreement with values reported for corals collected in natural seawater. However, differences were observed between the two species, and both were slightly deviating from inorganic aragonite D values. These deviations are well explained by Rayleigh fractionation process in the calcifying fluid (assuming it is mainly seawater). This was observed both for elements with D > 1 (Ba and Sr) and D < 1 (Li, Mg, Na, and K). P. damicornis showed open system behavior (∼20% of its Ca utilized) while A. cervicornis showed more closed calcifying reservoir (∼50% of its Ca utilized). The finding that the distribution coefficients of the six minor and trace elements are constant for a given species, should help in the reconstruction of past seawater chemistry based on multielement measurements in fossil corals. In particular, Na/Cacoral can be used to reconstruct past ocean Ca concentrations and with El/Cacoral ratios for other elements, their concentrations for the Cenozoic can be reconstructed.
topic coral calcification
trace elements
distribution coefficient
Rayleigh fractionation
seawater paleochemistry
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2021.657176/full
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