Assessing the paleoclimatic utility
of the Indo-Pacific coral genus Diploastrea in a 225-year oxygen
isotope record from Fiji
Stefan Bagnato 2003
A thesis presented to the Faculty of the University at Albany, State
University of New York in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for the degree of Master of Science
College of Arts & Sciences, Department of Earth and Atmospheric
Sciences
Advisor: B.K. Linsley
Abstract
In the Western Pacific there remains, both spatially and temporally,
a sparse record of surface ocean conditions and very few long
paleoclimate records able to extend our understanding of this
important region. The coral genus Porites is the common coral
currently used for Pacific paleoclimate studies and has proven to be
very useful. The massive coral Diploastrea, due to its slow
growth rate and dense structure, may preserve temporally longer
geochemical proxy records than Porites colonies of the same
length. Its long lifespan and fossil history give this genus
great potential; however no assessment has been made of the
paleoclimatic utility of Diploastrea skeletons.
Presented here are Diploastrea d18O time series from Savusavu, Fiji,
a region sensitive to combined SST and precipitation changes due to
activity of the El Niņo Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the South
Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ). Sampling of a single skeletal
element and/or a narrow sample track results in annual variations
with the least amount of time averaging and greatest
amplitude. Higher winter growth rates coupled with a constant
sampling interval have preferentially captured winter conditions in
the geochemical composition of Diploastrea's skeleton. These
winter-biased d18O time series illustrate that Diploastrea is as
effective as Porites in recording the interannual environmental
history of the region, dominated by both sea surface temperature
(SST) and SPCZ-related rainfall. Examination of SST and
precipitation data suggests that the trend component in Porites d18O
at this site is amplified relative to observed trends in SST and
expected trends in d18Oseawater, and that Diploastrea-generated d18O
time series more closely reflects variability on this time
scale. Utilizing Singular Spectrum Analysis (SSA) analysis, it
is demonstrated that Diploastrea captures climate variability
related to the Interdecadal Pacific Oscillation (IPO) as faithfully
or more so than Porites. Wavelet analysis reveals a splitting
of ENSO spectral power around 1880 to include lower frequencies,
indicating that this interdecadal mode of variability may be
fundamentally linked to ENSO, although it is observed to operate
independently. The results presented here suggest that
Diploastrea skeletal d18O reliably records both high and low
frequency climate signals with some notable improvements over the
genus Porites, and has enormous future potential for reconstructing
tropical climate over the past 600-800 years.
Bagnato, S., 2003. Assessing the paleoclimatic utility of the
Indo-Pacific coral genus Diploastrea in a 225-year oxygen isotope
record from Fiji.
Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of New York at Albany. 128
pp., +viii
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE
Oversize (*) QC 869 Z899 2003 B34
thesis (text
pdf) - 1.7MB pdf file
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