Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6358874 Marine Pollution Bulletin 2014 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Foraminifera along the cores confirmed increasing of pollution toward the present.•Foraminifera correlated studies inferred loss of old mangrove systems.•Radiocarbon dates integrated to sediment rates marked the European settlement.•Ammonia tepida is dominant at upper intervals, as a human pollution bioindicator.•Buliminella elegantissima was dominant at core deeper samples before the discovery by Europeans.

To detect changes during the Late Holocene and historical periods in Guanabara Bay, the paleoecological and ecological parameters from nine cores were analysed using foraminiferal assemblages and bioindicators. Using radiocarbon dates and sedimentation rates in the cores, it was possible to detect the first Europeans' arrival in the 16th century. Foraminiferal bioindicators of organic matter and human pollution were correlated with radiocarbon dates from the bottom and middle of the cores in each region and revealed an increase in pollution along the cores. The foraminiferal results were compared with total organic carbon (TOC) values before, during and after European settlement and showed a historical increase in organic matter.Pristine mangrove ecosystems are characterised by agglutinated species such as Ammotium salsum, and the presence of this organism also confirmed the extent of historical mangrove forests. Ammonia tepida, Buliminella elegantissima and Elphidium excavatum were the dominant species, but they presented distinct patterns over time. B. elegantissima was dominant before the European influence in older sediments with high organic matter content that were found at deeper intervals. A. tepida is dominant in younger sediments at upper intervals, as a bioindicator of human pollution.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Oceanography
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