Abstract
The longest available time series on ocean currents indicates that the southward flow of water from the Greenland Sea is weakening, and that correlative large-amplitude changes have occurred in the rate of formation of intermediate Labrador Sea water. These have been linked to changes in regional climate which, if trends continue, could within 30 years alter the flow of the North Atlantic Drift and possibly interrupt the formation of Labrador Sea water, profoundly affecting regional climates, marine ecosystems and fisheries. We are attempting to use the carbonate skeletons of cold-water corals to find out how rapidly and how often the thermohaline circulation of the NE vs. NW Atlantic has changed in the past, just as tree rings and ice cores are used to investigate climate change on land.
We have focussed on the NE Atlantic for our preliminary work, notably the Faroe-Shetland Channel: a major gateway between the Atlantic Ocean and the Norwegian Sea. Warm North Atlantic Drift water passes north through this channel on the surface, warming northern Europe. Cold Norwegian Sea Overflow Water returns at depth, contributing to the formation of North Atlantic Deep Water. Existing records are too short to allow conclusions regarding recent temporal changes in this inflow, so proxies are sought. We have analysed live-collected Lophelia pertusa skeletons collected in October 2001 using a ring dredge from RV Scotia along the worlds longest-running hydrographic transect (from 1893). Corals were sectioned using a slow-speed Isomet saw, and sampled for isotopic analysis using a Merchantek micromill. Observation of sectioned corals revealed dense-less dense couplets, as in every coral studied to date from tropical to deep cold-water environments worldwide. We sampled circumferentially, in the centres of individual bands, so as to produce temperature estimates using the “lines” technique of Smith et al. (2000). The results were simultaneously encouraging and confusing.
Each of the coral samples generated lines from which temperatures could be estimated. Dense skeletal bands had lower temperatures than the less-dense bands, hence we conclude these were winter and summer bands, respectively. The mean annual temperature (MAT) range determined from one of the corals was 3.8°C. Pooling results from several corals yielded a lower estimate for MAT range: 2.3°C. The absolute temperatures from the corals, however, were somewhat lower than the instrumental record with “winter” records being more depleted than the “summer values”. This was unexpected and shows that determining detailed climate records from L. pertusa may be more difficult than hoped.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Adkins JF, Boyle EA, Curry WB, Lutringer A (2003) Stable isotopes in deep-sea corals and a new mechanisms for “vital effects”. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 67: 1129–1143
Bett B (2001) Benthic ecology of the Faeroe-Shetland Channel. In: Atlantic margin environmental surveys of the seafloor 1996 and 1998. CD-ROM Geotek Ltd
Blamart D, Rollion-Bard TC, Cuif J-P, Juillet-Leclerc A, Lutringer A, van Weering T, Henriet J-P (2003) C and O isotopes in deep-sea corals (Lophelia pertusa) measured by ion microprobe. Erlanger Geol Abh Sonderbd 4: 22
Crease J (1964) The flow of Norwegian Sea water through the Faroe Bank Channel. Deep-Sea Res 12: 143–150
Druffel ERM, Griffin S, Guilderson T, Kashgarian M, Schrag D (2001) Changes of subtropical North Pacific radiocarbon and correlation with climate variability. Radiocarbon 43: 15–25
Frank N, Paterne M, Ayliffe L, Lutringer A, Blamart D, van Weering T (2003) Cold-water corals of the northeast Atlantic margin: archives of intermediate water circulation during the Holocene. Geophys Res Abstr, 5, Europ Geophys Soc
Freiwald A, Hühnerbach V, Lindberg B, Wilson J, Campbell J (2002) The Sula Reef Complex, Norwegian Shelf. Facies 47: 179–200
Goldstein SJ, Lea DW, Chakraborty S, Kashgarian M, Murrell MT (2001) Uranium-series and radiocarbon geochronology of deep-sea corals: implications for Southern Ocean ventilation rates and the ocean carbon cycle. Earth Planet Sci Lett 193: 167–182
Grehan AJ, Kiriakoulakis K, Mahaffey C, Wolff GA (2003) Food web relationships in deepwater corals from the Porcupine Sea Bight and Rockall Trough, west coast of Ireland. Erlanger Geol Abh Sonderbd 4: 40
Hall-Spencer J, Allain V, Fosså JH (2002) Trawling damage to Northeast Atlantic ancient coral reefs. Proc R Soc London B 269: 507–511
Hansen B, Osterhus S (2000) North Atlantic-Norwegian Sea exchanges. Progr Oceanogr 45: 109–208
Hansen B, Turrell WR, Osterhus S (2001) Decreasing overflow from the Nordic Seas in the Atlantic Ocean through the Faroe Bank channel in 1950. Nature 411: 927–930
Jones PD, New M, Parker DE, Martin S, Rigor IG (1999) Surface air temperature and its changes over the past 150 years. Rev Geophys 37: 173–199
Keigwin LD, Boyle EA (2000) Detecting Holocene changes in thermohaline circulation. Proc Nat Acad Sci 97: 1343–1346
Kiriakoulakis K, White M, Freiwald A, Wolff GA (2003) Biogeochemistry of deep-water coral systems at the NW European Continental Margin. Erlanger Geol Abh Sonderbd 4: 52
Knutson SW, Buddemeier RW, Smith S (1972) Coral chronometers: seasonal growth bands in reef corals. Science 177: 270–272
Lazier AV, Smith JE, Risk MJ, Schwarcz HP (1999) The skeletal structure of Desmophyllum cristagalli: the use of deep-water corals in sclerochronology. Lethaia 32: 119–130
Mann ME, Bradley RS, Hughes MK (1999) Northern hemisphere temperatures during the past millennium: interferences, uncertainties, and limitations. Geophys Res Lett 26: 759–762
Rasmussen TL, Bäckström D, Heinemeier J, Klitgaard-Kristensen D, Knutz PC, Kuijpers A, Lassen S, Thomsen E, Troelstra SR, van Weering TCE (2002) The Faroe-Shetland Gateway: Late Quaternary water mass exchange between the Nordic Seas and the northeastern Atlantic. Mar Geol 188: 165–192
Risk MJ, Kramer JR (1981) Water chemistry inside coral heads: determination of pH, Ca and Mg. 4th Int Coral Reef Symp, Manila, pp 54
Risk MJ, Muller HR (1983) Porewater in coral heads: evidence for nutrient regeneration. Limnol Oceanogr 28: 1004–1008
Rogers AD (1999) The biology of Lophelia pertusa (Linnaeus 1758) and other deep-water reef-forming corals and impacts from human activities. Int Rev Hydrobiol 84: 315–406
Sherwood OA, Sinclair DJ, Risk MJ, Scott DB (2003) Testing the fidelity of Mg/Ca as a temperature proxy in the deep-sea coral Primnoa resedaeformis: Records since 1950. Erlanger Geol Abh Sonderbd 4: 79
Sherwood OA, Risk MJ (in press) Climate significance of growth patterns in the deep-sea coral Primnoa resedaeforms. Mar Ecol Progr Ser
Smith JE (1997) The use of deep-sea corals as paleoceanographic monitors. PhD thesis, McMaster Univ, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Smith JE, Risk MJ, Schwarz HP, McConnaughey TA (1997) Rapid climate change in the North Atlantic during the younger Dryas recorded by deep-sea corals. Nature 386: 818–820
Smith JE, Risk MJ, Schwarcz HP, McConnaughey TA, Keller NB (2000) Deep-sea corals as paleotemperature indicators: overcoming “vital effects”. Palaios 15: 25–32
Smith JE, Schwarcz HP, Risk MJ (2002) Patterns of isotopic equilibrium in azooxanthellate coral skeletons. Hydrobiologia 471: 111–115
Tudhope AW, Chilcott CP, McCulloch MT, Cook ER, Chappell J, Ellam RM, Lea DW, Lough JM, Shimmield GB (2001) Variability in the El Niño-Southern Oscillation through a glacial-interglacial cycle. Science 291: 1511–1517
Turrell WR, Slesser G, Adams RD, Payne R, Gillibrand PA (1999) Decadal variability in the composition of Faroe Shetland Channel bottom water. Deep-Sea Res I 46: 1–25
Wilson JB (1979) The distribution of the coral Lophelia pertusa (L.) [L. prolifera (Pallas)] in the north-east Atlantic. J Mar Biol Ass UK 59: 149–164
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2005 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Risk, M.J., Hall-Spencer, J., Williams, B. (2005). Climate records from the Faroe-Shetland Channel using Lophelia pertusa (Linnaeus, 1758). In: Freiwald, A., Roberts, J.M. (eds) Cold-Water Corals and Ecosystems. Erlangen Earth Conference Series. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-27673-4_55
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-27673-4_55
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-24136-2
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-27673-9
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)