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Published February 15, 2023 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Coherent tracer correlations in deep-sea corals and implications for biomineralization mechanisms underlying vital effects

Abstract

Deep-sea corals are a useful archive of thermocline, intermediate, and deep waters in past oceans. However, application of traditional oceanographic tracers to deep-sea corals remains a challenge due to our insufficient understanding of their "vital effects". Deep-sea corals are ideal test organisms to study the mechanism underlying vital effects generally, due to the large tracer gradients in individual corals living under relatively constant environmental conditions. Lessons learned from these corals might apply to other scleractinia and to marine calcifiers more generally. Here we present stable isotope, minor and trace metal (Me/Ca ratios) data in a suite of modern Desmophyllum dianthus specimens, collected over multiple spatial scales in individual corals (bulk, micromill, SIMS, NanoSIMS), with multi-proxy analyses made on the same material whenever possible. Spatially coherent Me/Ca correlations are observed in the fibrous aragonite of individual corals, including positive correlations between Mg/Ca, Li/Ca and B/Ca, as well as negative correlations between Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca, consistent with previous studies. We also for the first time document strong correlations between the isotopic (δ¹⁸O and δ¹³C) and elemental compositions of the skeletons, most notably a negative correlation between δ¹⁸O and Mg/Ca. The centers of calcification (COCs) in the coral skeletons show distinct tracer correlations from the aragonite fibers that possibly reflect a more complicated formation mechanism. We interpret the spatially coherent tracer correlations in deep-sea corals with a numerical model of coral calcification previously developed for stable isotopes that considers the role of the enzyme carbonic anhydrase in the calcification processs. With the carbonate chemistry in the model constrained by the stable isotope data, we are able to explain the observed Me/Ca correlations as well as their range of variability, as a result of internal pH elevation in the extracellular calcifying fluid (ECF) of the corals with limited Ca-pumping through the calicoblastic membrane. In particular, the positive Mg/Ca–B/Ca correlation in the fibrous aragonite suggests a borate (B(OH)₄–) substitution for carbonate ion (CO₃²⁻) incorporation mechanism in biogenic aragonite. We also suggest the growth rate dependence of the incorporation of minor and trace elements based conceptually on an ion-by-ion growth model may help explain the absolute Me/Ca values in biogenic aragonites. Finally, we generally find more limited tracer variability in corals from undersaturated seawater compared to their counterparts from supersaturated conditions, suggesting a limit to their internal pH elevation in response to this environmental stress. Understanding the biomineralization mechanisms underlying the vital effects is important for better use of these tracers for paleoceanographic applications, and may shed light on the response of marine calcification to future ocean acidification.

Additional Information

© 2022 Elsevier. We thank Jessica Crumpton-Banks, Jared Marske and Grecia Ames for assistance in the lab. We would also like to thank Joe Stewart and Russell Day for providing standards for the geochemical analyses. Claire Rollion-Bard and three anonymous reviewers provided constructive comments that helped improve the manuscript. This research received funding from NSF grant OCE-1737404 awarded to JFA and China Scholarship Council Ph.D. Scholarship 201508020007 awarded to SC. SC was additionally sponsored by NSFC grant 42103081 and Shanghai Sailing Program grant 21YF1419100. JWBR was supported by ERC Starting Grant 805246 OldCO2NewArchives. The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023