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- Title
Metazoan/microbial biostalactites from present-day submarine caves in the Mediterranean Sea.
- Authors
Sanfilippo, Rossana; Rosso, Antonietta; Guido, Adriano; Mastandrea, Adelaide; Russo, Franco; Riding, Robert; Taddei Ruggiero, Emma
- Abstract
Biostalactites formed by metazoan-microbialite associations from three submerged marine caves in the Plemmirio Peninsula (south of Syracuse, Ionian Sea) are randomly distributed and show different sizes and morphologies, as well as variations in surface roughness/smoothness. The biostalactites consist of crusts a few centimeters thick of small serpulids and other metazoans, associated with fine-grained carbonate; the larger ones often include a nucleus of serpulid tubes (Protula). The metazoans include mainly serpuloideans, sponges, bryozoans and foraminifers but microbial carbonates are also significant components. The composition of both the living communities and thanatocoenoses on the outer surfaces, as well as the composition and fabric of the internal framework, were analysed and used to reconstruct the history of the caves. All of the identified sessile faunas mainly consist of cryptic and sciaphilic dwellers that reflect cave conditions and their variations through time. The distribution pattern, composition and abundance of the present-day dwellers largely depend on the degree of roughness of the biostalactite surfaces and their positions within the caves. It has been suggested that the Protula specimens in the nuclei represent pioneer populations that formed aggregates during the early cave colonization phase, in response to relatively high food supply from seawater inflow and intruding continental waters. By contrast, the outer metazoan- microbialite carbonates reflect more confined conditions in the caves caused by Holocene sea-level rises. Hypotheses are proposed for biostalactite growth, taking into account information about the growth rates of some constituents, and evidence of dissolution effects. Similarities and differences between these biostalactites and other Holocene deposits previously described from submarine caves in the Mediterranean Sea and in tropical reefs are discussed.
- Subjects
MEDITERRANEAN Sea; METAZOA; BILATERIA; CAVES; LANDFORMS; MARINE ecology
- Publication
Marine Ecology, 2015, Vol 36, Issue 4, p1277
- ISSN
0173-9565
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/maec.12229