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1 Institut für Geologie und Paläontologie, Universität Stuttgart, 70174 Stuttgart, Germany
2 Centro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias Marinas, La Paz 23000, Mexico
3 Institut für Geowissenschaften, Universität Potsdam, 14415 Potsdam, Germany
4 Departamento de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnologicas, Hermosillo 83000, Mexico
5 Centro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias Marinas, La Paz 23000, Mexico
In addition to salinity and temperature, nutrient concentrations in surface waters are known to have a significant impact on distribution of carbonate-producing biota, but have never been quantitatively evaluated against different temperatures along a latitudinal transect. The western coast of the Gulf of California, Mexico, presents a natural laboratory for investigating the influence of oceanographic parameters such as salinity, temperature, and chlorophyll a, a proxy for nutrients, on the composition of a range of modern heterozoan and photozoan carbonate environments along a north-south latitudinal gradient spanning the entire warm-temperate realm (29°N23°N). Chlorophyll a, measured in situ at half-hour resolution, is highly variable throughout the year due to short-term upwelling, and increases significantly from the southern to northern Gulf of California. Salinity, in contrast, fluctuates little and remains at an average of 35
. From south to north, carbonate production ranges from oligotrophic-mesotrophic, coral reef dominated shallow-water areas (minimum temperature 18.6 °C) through mesotrophic-eutrophic, red algaldominated, inner-shelf carbonate production in the central gulf (minimum temperature 16 °C), and to molluscan-bryozoan, eutrophic inner- to outer-shelf environments (minimum temperature 13.7 °C). The Gulf of California data, supplemented with oceanographic and compositional information from a database compiled from a spectrum of modern carbonate systems worldwide, demonstrates the significance of nutrient control in the formation of heterozoan, photozoan, and transitional heterozoan-photozoan carbonate systems and serves as a basis for more accurately interpreting fossil carbonates.
Key Words: heterozoan photozoan nutrients chlorophyll Gulf of California
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