Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4749435 Marine Micropaleontology 2006 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
Neodenticula seminae is an important component of pelagic diatom floras in the subarctic North Pacific and its adjacent seas. We conducted an SEM image analysis of four series of samples collected by sediment traps in the NW Pacific, in order to investigate the relations between its morphology, evolution, and environment. Seasonal variation in the skeletal morphology was common: lightly silicified morphs were dominant during spring blooms and in the summer (under oligotrophic conditions owing to surface water stratification and progressive nutrient limitation), whereas heavily silicified morphs became abundant in the fall and winter, subsequent to the onset of intensive vertical mixing. These observations suggest that the morphology of N. seminae is influenced by environmental factors including the nutrient availability as well as by its reproductive strategy.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Palaeontology
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