TY - JOUR
T1 - Growth stress in oysters during early Bartonian: effects of high temperature and low seasonality in the Indian palaeotropics
AU - Mitra, Aniket
AU - De Winter, Niels J
AU - Miloïkovitch, Titouan
AU - Halder, Kalyan
AU - Ledésert, Béatrice
AU - Claeys, Philippe
AU - Müller, Inigo Andreas
PY - 2025/2/11
Y1 - 2025/2/11
N2 - Earth’s climate experienced an extreme transition going from the Eocene hothouse into Oligocene icehouse conditions. The Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO ~41Ma) briefly interrupted this cooling trend, initiated in the middle Lutetian (~44 Ma). The tropical position of the Indian subcontinent during the MECO provides an ideal setting to investigate low-latitude seasonality under hot climate conditions, considering the modern minimal seasonality in the tropics. To better understand the seasonality and its effect on shallow marine fauna, a high-resolution multiproxy study is carried out on oyster specimens of the type Flemingostrea pseudoflemingi from the early Bartonian palaeo-tropical Kutch Basin. Clumped isotope (Δ47) thermometry combined with δ18O analyses from excellently preserved shell specimens suggests low seasonal temperature fluctuations (Δ47-T: ~3°C) with a mean temperature of 34.4±2.0°C (95% CI) in the warmer season and 31.4±2.4°C in the months of highest precipitation. Oyster populations from distinct regions within the basin display varying sizes. Smaller variants, inhabiting a zone influenced by marine conditions (δ18Ow: -0.2±0.5‰ to 0.4±1.0‰) experienced slower growth rates (~18 µm/day) only during the warmer months. In contrast, larger variants, probably residing at shallower environment prone to more seasonal changes due to evaporation and freshwater input (δ18Ow: -1.0±0.8‰ to 1±0.7‰), maintained a steady growth rate (~58 µm/day) throughout the year. Although the observed seasonality is similar to modern tropical settings of the Indian and Pacific Ocean, the significantly warmer temperature range created a stressful environment for oysters, where seasonally diverse habitat and nutrient-rich freshwater input were critical to their growth.
AB - Earth’s climate experienced an extreme transition going from the Eocene hothouse into Oligocene icehouse conditions. The Middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO ~41Ma) briefly interrupted this cooling trend, initiated in the middle Lutetian (~44 Ma). The tropical position of the Indian subcontinent during the MECO provides an ideal setting to investigate low-latitude seasonality under hot climate conditions, considering the modern minimal seasonality in the tropics. To better understand the seasonality and its effect on shallow marine fauna, a high-resolution multiproxy study is carried out on oyster specimens of the type Flemingostrea pseudoflemingi from the early Bartonian palaeo-tropical Kutch Basin. Clumped isotope (Δ47) thermometry combined with δ18O analyses from excellently preserved shell specimens suggests low seasonal temperature fluctuations (Δ47-T: ~3°C) with a mean temperature of 34.4±2.0°C (95% CI) in the warmer season and 31.4±2.4°C in the months of highest precipitation. Oyster populations from distinct regions within the basin display varying sizes. Smaller variants, inhabiting a zone influenced by marine conditions (δ18Ow: -0.2±0.5‰ to 0.4±1.0‰) experienced slower growth rates (~18 µm/day) only during the warmer months. In contrast, larger variants, probably residing at shallower environment prone to more seasonal changes due to evaporation and freshwater input (δ18Ow: -1.0±0.8‰ to 1±0.7‰), maintained a steady growth rate (~58 µm/day) throughout the year. Although the observed seasonality is similar to modern tropical settings of the Indian and Pacific Ocean, the significantly warmer temperature range created a stressful environment for oysters, where seasonally diverse habitat and nutrient-rich freshwater input were critical to their growth.
KW - climatology (global change)
KW - Ecology
KW - Geochemistry
KW - Clumped isotopes
KW - Eocene
KW - Fossil Oyster
KW - Plaeoclimate reconstruction
KW - Plaeotropics of India
KW - MECO
KW - Global Warming
UR - https://essopenarchive.org/doi/full/10.22541/essoar.173924137.77536132/v1
U2 - 10.22541/essoar.173924137.77536132/v1
DO - 10.22541/essoar.173924137.77536132/v1
M3 - Article
SN - 2333-5084
JO - Earth and Space Science Open Archive
JF - Earth and Space Science Open Archive
ER -