PDF
Abstract
Understanding the past and present changes is critical for evaluating the future climatic changes. In order to understand the paleoproductivity and depositional environments of Northern Indian Ocean, two sediment cores were collected, one each from the Arabian Sea (lat. 16°51.40′N and long. 71°54.37′E, water depth 803 m) and the Bay of Bengal (lat. 13°05.35′N and long. 91°28.21′E, water depth 3 054 m). The surface seawater samples indicate higher pCO2 values in Arabian Sea as compared to the Bay of Bengal. The sediment organic carbon variations along with sedimentological and other geochemical parameters were studied. Sediment organic carbon varied from 0.5%–4.7% and 0.3%–1.22% in Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal, respectively. In Arabian Sea, low productivity, oxic conditions and less intense southwest monsoon prevailed during the deglacial period, whereas productivity has increased from last 16 kyr to the modern age. In the Bay of Bengal, organic carbon decreased from the Last Glacial Maxima (LGM) to the modern age, indicating higher productivity in the past as compared to modern age. Fe was associated with organic carbon in the Bay of Bengal and increased during LGM, showing similar trend to that of organic carbon, indicating that Fe may be the limiting factor for the growth of phytoplankton in the Bay of Bengal in the modern age. In the Bay of Bengal, Mn is enriched during modern age and is depleted during LGM, whereas chromium showed the opposite trend indicating anoxic conditions during the LGM, whereas in Arabian Sea the trends are opposite to the Bay of Bengal.
Keywords
paleoproductivity
/
geochemical
/
deglacial
/
organic carbon
Cite this article
Download citation ▾
Suhas S. Shetye, Maruthadu Sudhakar, Rahul Mohan, Babula Jena.
Contrasting productivity and redox potential in Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal.
Journal of Earth Science, 2014, 25(2): 366-370 DOI:10.1007/s12583-014-0415-9
| [1] |
Barnes H. Apparatus and Methods in Oceanography, 1959 London: Allan and Unwin, 341.
|
| [2] |
Behrenfeld M J, Falkowski P G. A Consumer’s Guide to Phytoplankton Primary Productivity Models. Limnol. Oceanogr., 1997, 42(7): 1479-1491.
|
| [3] |
Bhushan R, Dutta K, Somayajulu B L K. Concentrations and Burial Fluxes of Organic and Inorganic Carbon on the Eastern Margins of the Arabian Sea. Mar. Geol., 2001, 178(1–4): 95-113.
|
| [4] |
Brewer P G, Goldman J. Alkalinity Changes Generated by Phytoplankton Growth. Limnol. Oceanogr., 1976, 21(1): 108-117.
|
| [5] |
Byrne R H, Breland J A. High Precision Multiwavelength pH Determinations in Seawater Using Cresol Red. Deep Sea Research I, 1989, 36(5): 803-810.
|
| [6] |
Dean W E, Gardner J V, Piper D Z. Inorganic Geochemical Indicators of Glacial-Interglacial Changes in Productivity and Anoxia on the California Continental Margin. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 1997, 61(21): 4507-4518.
|
| [7] |
Dickson A G, Millero F J. A Comparison of the Equilibrium Constants for the Dissociation of Carbonic-Acid in Seawater Media. Deep Sea Research I, 1987, 34(10): 1733-1743.
|
| [8] |
Duce R A, Unni C K, Bay B J, . Long Range Atmospheric Transport of Soil Dust from Asia to the North Pacific: Temporal Variability. Science, 1980, 209(4464): 1522-1524.
|
| [9] |
Emerson S, Hedges J. Processes Controlling Organic Carbon Content of Open Ocean Sediments. Paleoceanography, 1988, 3(5): 621-634.
|
| [10] |
Folk R L. Petrology of Sedimentary Rocks, 1968 Austin: Hemphills, 177.
|
| [11] |
Gandhi N, Prakash S, Ramesh R, . Nitrogen Uptake Rates and New Production in the Northern Indian Ocean. Ind. J. Mar. Sci., 2010, 39(3): 362-368.
|
| [12] |
Haake B, Ittekkot V, Rixen T, . Seasonality and Interannual Variability of Particle Fluxes to the Deep Arabian Sea. Deep-Sea Res. I, 1993, 40(7): 1323-1344.
|
| [13] |
Hedges J I, Keil R G. Sedimentary Organic Matter Preservation: An Assessment and Speculative Synthesis. Mar. Chem., 1995, 49(2–3): 137-139.
|
| [14] |
Kessarkar P M, Rao V P, Ahmad S M, . Changing Sedimentary Environment during the Late Quaternary: Sedimentological and Isotopic Evidence from the Distal Bengal Fan. Deep Sea Research I, 2005, 52(9): 1591-1615.
|
| [15] |
Kumar S, Ramesh R, Sardesai S, . High New Production in the Bay of Bengal: Possible Causes and Implications. Geophys. Res. Lett., 2004, 31 18 L18304
|
| [16] |
Loring D H, Rantala R T T. Manual for Geochemical Analysis of Marine Sediments and Suspended Particulate Matter. Earth Sci. Rev., 1992, 32(4): 235-283.
|
| [17] |
Madhupratap M S, Prasanna K S, Bhattathiri P M A, . Mechanism of the Biological Response to Winter Cooling in the Northeastern Arabian Sea. Nature, 1996, 384(549–552): 549-552.
|
| [18] |
Monteiro M S, Roychoudhury A N. Spatial Characteristics of Sediment Trace Metals in an Eastern Boundary Upwelling Retention Area (St. Helena Bay, South Africa): A Hydrodynamic-Biological Pump Hypothesis. Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science, 2005, 65(1–2): 123-134.
|
| [19] |
Naqvi S W A. Some Aspects of the Oxygen Deficient Conditions and Denitrification in the Arabian Sea. Jour. Mar. Res., 1987, 29(4): 459-469.
|
| [20] |
Paropkari A L, Prakash B C, Mascarenhas A. New Evidence for Enhanced Preservation of Organic Carbon in Contact with Oxygen Minimum Zone on the Western Continental Slope of India. Mar. Geol., 1993, 111(1–2): 7-13.
|
| [21] |
Pattan J N, Masuzawa T, Naidu P D. Productivity Fluctuation in the Southeastern Arabian Sea during the Last 140 ka. Palaeogeogr. Palaeclimatol. Palaeoecol., 2003, 193(3-4): 575-590.
|
| [22] |
Ross D J K, Bustin R M. Characterizing the Shale Gas Resource Potential of Devonian-Mississippian Strata in the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin: Application of an Integrated Formation Evaluation. AAPG Bulletin, 2008, 92(1): 87-125.
|
| [23] |
Sarkar A, Ramesh R, Somayajulu B L K, . Holocene Monsoon Record from the Eastern Arabian Sea. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett., 2000, 177: 209-218.
|
| [24] |
Sarma V V S S, Kumar M D, George M D. The Central and Eastern Arabian Sea as a Perennial Source of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide. Tellus, 1998, 50B: 179-184.
|
| [25] |
Sarma V V S S. Monthly Variability in Surface pCO2 and Net Air-Sea Flux in the Arabian Sea. Journal Geophys. Res., 2003, 108 3255
|
| [26] |
Singh A, Jani R A, Ramesh R. Spatiotemporal Variations of the δ18O—Salinity Relation in the Northern Indian Ocean. Deep Sea Research I, 2010, 57(11): 1422-1431.
|
| [27] |
Singh A D, Kroon D, Ganeshram R S. Millennial Scale Variations in Productivity and OMZ Intensity in the Eastern Arabian Sea. J. Geol. Soc. India, 2006, 68(3): 369-378.
|
| [28] |
Somayajulu B L K, Yadav D N, Sarin M M. Recent Sedimentary Record from the Arabian Sea. Proc. Ind. Acad. Sci., 1994, 103(2): 315-327.
|
| [29] |
Tiwari M, Ramesh R, Bhushan R, . Did the Indo-Asian Summer Monsoon Decrease during the Holocene Following Insolation?. J. Quat. Science, 2010, 25(7): 1179-1188.
|
| [30] |
Tiwari M, Ramesh R, Yadava M G, . Is there a Persistent Control of Monsoon Winds by Precipitation during Late Holocene?. Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 2006, 7 3 Q03001
|
| [31] |
Tiwari M, Ramesh R, Somayajulu B L K, . Paleomonsoon Precipitation Deduced from Sediment Core from the Equatorial Indian Ocean. Geo-Mar. Lett., 2006, 26(1): 23-30.
|
| [32] |
Tiwari M, Ramesh R, Bhushan R, . Paleoproductivity Variations in the Equatorial Arabian Sea: Implications for East African and Indian Summer Rainfalls and the El Niño Frequency. Radiocarbon, 2006, 48(1): 17-29.
|
| [33] |
Walkey A, Black I A. An Examination of the Degtjareff Method for Determining Soil Organic Matter and Proposed Modifications of the Chromic Acid Titration Method. Soil Science, 1934, 37(1): 29-38.
|
| [34] |
Wyrtki K. Oceanographic Atlas of the International Indian Ocean Expedition, 1971 Washington D.C.: NSF-IODEUS Government Printing Office, 531.
|