Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments

, Volume 93, Issue 3, pp 327–353 | Cite as

Macro- versus microfauna: resolution potential of bivalves, gastropods, foraminifera and ostracods in reconstructing the Holocene palaeoenvironmental evolution of the Pearl River delta, China

  • Matthias Alberti
  • Manja Hethke
  • Franz T. Fürsich
  • Chunlian Liu
Original Paper

Abstract

Sedimentological, taphonomic, and palaeoecological analyses of a core from the central Pearl River delta plain allow a detailed reconstruction of the Holocene sedimentological and biological evolution. The marine ingression of the postglacial sea-level rise reached the core site 9,600 years ago and quickly established brackish conditions. Subsequent to a minor regression, water depths and salinity levels peaked between 7,500 and 6,800 years ago. The eventual cessation of the postglacial sea-level rise led to progradation of the delta front and the establishment of fluvial conditions around 4,200 years BP. Subsequent episodic and short-lived marine ingressions can be attributed to shifting delta lobes. While the reconstructed model parallels already established global and regional sea-level curves, the dataset allows further conclusions. The highly fossiliferous core yields abundant bivalves, gastropods, foraminifera and ostracods. Although these fossil groups recur throughout the core, their resolution potentials for palaeoenvironmental reconstructions differ substantially. Bivalves and foraminifera are extremely abundant. However, their very low species richness and high tolerance to environmental fluctuations only allow the reconstruction of the major steps of delta evolution. Gastropods are more diverse (22 taxa) but occur only sporadically, which diminishes their resolution potential. Another problem is the insufficient knowledge on these mm-scale brackish-water molluscs. In the present study, ostracods exhibit the highest resolution potential, which is mainly due to their high abundance and diversity (32 taxa). Although many of the recorded ostracod species are euryoecious with regard to environmental factors such as salinity, substrate, or water depth, the use of palaeocommunity analyses allows the most detailed palaeoenvironmental reconstruction. While the study of molluscs involves considerably less preparation time than that of microfossils, only ostracods reflect all environmental changes present in the studied core.

Keywords

Palaeoenvironment Pearl River delta China Holocene 

Notes

Acknowledgements

The research was supported by the National Science Foundation of China (grants 40872024, 40272011) and was carried out in the framework of a DAAD-CSC (Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst—China Scholarship Council) project-based exchange of academics programme which we acknowledge with gratitude. We would like to thank R. Matzke-Karasz, Munich, for assisting us with the identification of the ostracod fauna and R. Höfling, Erlangen, for advice on foraminifera. J.-D. Gu, Hong Kong, kindly assisted with access to the mollusc collections of the Swire Institute of Marine Science. Dong Yixin, Guangzhou, is thanked for useful discussions. H. Schönig, Würzburg, photographed some of the macrofossils and Cornelius Schmid, Erlangen, supported the authors in data management. We acknowledge the constructive criticism of an earlier draft of the paper by J. Cann of the University of South Australia and by an anonymous reviewer. The present manuscript was improved following reviews of Alan Lord and Peter Frenzel.

Supplementary material

12549_2012_101_MOESM1_ESM.xls (90 kb)
ESM 1 (XLS 90 kb)
12549_2012_101_MOESM2_ESM.xls (40 kb)
ESM 2 (XLS 40 kb)

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Copyright information

© Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung and Springer 2012

Authors and Affiliations

  • Matthias Alberti
    • 1
  • Manja Hethke
    • 1
  • Franz T. Fürsich
    • 1
  • Chunlian Liu
    • 2
  1. 1.GeoZentrum Nordbayern, Fachgruppe PaläoUmweltFriedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-NürnbergErlangenGermany
  2. 2.Department of Earth SciencesSun Yat-sen UniversityGuangzhouChina

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