Environmental conditions controlling cold-water coral growth in the southern Alboran Sea since the last deglaciation
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Selvaggi, Mar; de la Fuente, María; Pérez Asensio, José Noel; Lo Iacono, Claudio; Català, Albert; Trias-Navarro, Sergio; Corbera, Guillem; Campderrós, Sara; Haghipour, Negar; Di Bella, Letizia; Van Rooij, David; Cacho, IsabelEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Cold-water corals Mediterranean thermohaline circulation Alboran Sea circulation
Fecha
2025-03-19Referencia bibliográfica
Selvaggi, M.; De La Fuente, M.; Pérez Asensio, J.N. [et al.]. (2025). Environmental conditions controlling cold-water coral growth in the southern Alboran Sea since the last deglaciation. Global and Planetary Change Volume 249, June 2025, 104792. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2025.104792
Patrocinador
ERC-Consolidator grant TIMED (Contract Agreement 683237); TRANSMOW project (PID2019-105523RB-I00); Agencia Estatal de Investigación (Spain), PID2022-138010OB-I00; Generalitat de Catalunya, 2021 SGR 01195; ICREA-Academia Award; Universitat de Barcelona and the Sapienza Università di Roma, “Vito Volterra” Grant; IPEV, EuroFLEETS GATEWAY project (Grant Agreement 228344); Junta de Andalucía, Research Group RNM-190Resumen
Cold-water coral (CWC) mounds are commonly found in the Alboran Sea (westernmost Mediterranean), specifically in the so-called East and West Melilla mound provinces. This study presents a multi-proxy analysis on the environmental changes that occurred in west Melilla since the last deglaciation (~14 kyr), based on the onmound core MD13–3451 (~370 m). The analyses performed include geochemical measurements of foraminiferal coatings (U/Mn) and skeletal calcite (stable oxygen and carbon isotopes, Mg/Ca-derived deep-water temperatures). Furthermore, the seawater δ18O (δ18Osw) and the ice-volume-corrected seawater δ18O (δ18Osw-ivc) have been estimated via paired analyses of Mg/Ca and δ18Ocarbonate. Our findings suggest that i) pulses of relatively warm deep-water during the last mound flourishing stage, here-referred to as ‘Cold Water Coral - Growth Phase 1’ (CWC-GP1; ~11–9 kyr), triggered a shift in coral species dominance in the west Melilla province, and ii) a rapid freshening of the waters occurred during CWC-GP1, indicating significant hydrographical changes. To further interpret these results, we combined them with comparable records from neighboring sites. We find that CWC-GP1 is closely coupled with a reorganization of the Alboran Sea water column. More precisely, we discuss the potential emergence of a western Mediterranean intermediate sourced water, which partly replaced intermediate waters from eastern Mediterranean sources and contributed to the enhanced hydrodynamics of the
region. We further propose that the interplay between strong near-bottom currents and increased upwelling conditions may have played a crucial role in controlling CWC growth dynamics.





