Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4749404 Marine Micropaleontology 2008 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

The diatom flora in a 164 cm long sediment core obtained from Jiaozhou Bay (Yellow Sea, China) was analyzed in order to trace the response of diatoms to environmental changes over the past 100 years. The sediment core was dated by 210Pb and 137Cs and represented approximately 100 years (1899–2001 A.D.). The flora was mainly composed of centric diatoms (59–96%). The concentration of diatoms declined sharply above 30 cm (after ~ 1981 A.D.), while the dominant species changed from Thalassiosira anguste-lineatus, Thalassiosira eccentria, Coscinodiscus excentricus, Coscinodiscus concinnus and Diploneis gorjanovici to Cyclotella stylorum and Paralia sulcata. Species richness decreased slightly, and the cell abundance of warm-water species increased. We argue that these floral changes were probably caused by climate change in combination with eutrophication resulting from aquaculture and sewage discharge.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Palaeontology
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