EGU22-9165
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-9165
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Sclerochronological insights into the environmental response of Corbula gibba from the Adriatic Sea

Pierluigi Strafella, Najat Al Fudhaili, Niels de Winter, Matthias López Correa, Sebastian Teichert, Giuseppe Scarcella, and Theresa Nohl
Pierluigi Strafella et al.
  • CNR IRBIM, Ancona, Italy (pierluigi.strafella@cnr.it)

Bivalve shells are accretionary biogenic carbonates that yield a record of the organisms’ life history, also with respect to the physiological response to the ambient environmental conditions. This is reflected by variations in the shells’ growth bands, their chemical composition, and morphological features, making them useful tools in paleobiology and paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Corbula gibba is an abundant bivalve species in the Adriatic Sea that is commonly used to resolve questions in age determinations, paleoenvironmental reconstructions and sequence stratigraphic studies [1,2]. Nevertheless, a detailed analysis of its response in growth bands and chemical signatures to environmental variations is currently missing. This study evaluates growth increments and chemical variations in Corbula gibba shells. The shells have been collected alive from the Western Adriatic Sea between Senigallia and Ancona to shed light on the reliability of the Corbula gibba as an archive for (paleo)environmental information. Mutvei's solution has been used [3] to stain the alternating dark and light bundles in the shell, enhancing the visualization of growth increments. High-resolution elemental profiles have been acquired across the outer shells layer using the non-destructive Micro X-ray fluorescence (µ-XRF) technique [4]. The results are compared to available climatic information for Ancona and indicate that Corbula gibba shells record detailed temporal changes in the environment such as tidal fluctuations caused by lunar cycle.

[1] Tomašových, A., Gallmetzer, I., Haselmair, A., Kaufman, D., Vidović, J., & Zuschin, M. (2017). Stratigraphic unmixing reveals repeated hypoxia events over the past 500 yr in the northern Adriatic Sea. Geology, 45 (4), 363-366.

[2] Tomašových, A., Gallmetzer, I., Haselmair, A., Kaufman, D., Kralj, M., & Cassin, D. et al. (2018). Tracing the effects of eutrophication on molluscan communities in sediment cores: outbreaks of an opportunistic species coincide with reduced bioturbation and high frequency of hypoxia in the Adriatic Sea. Paleobiology, 44 (4), 575-602.

[3] Schöne, B., Dunca, E., Fiebig, J., & Pfeiffer, M. (2005). Mutvei's solution: An ideal agent for resolving microgrowth structures of biogenic carbonates. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 228 (1-2), 149-166.

[4] de Winter, N.J., Sinnesael, M., Makarona, C., Vansteenberge, S., Claeys, P., (2017). Trace element analyses of carbonates using portable and micro-X-ray fluorescence: performance and optimization of measurement parameters and strategies. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry, 32, 1211–1223.

How to cite: Strafella, P., Al Fudhaili, N., de Winter, N., López Correa, M., Teichert, S., Scarcella, G., and Nohl, T.: Sclerochronological insights into the environmental response of Corbula gibba from the Adriatic Sea, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-9165, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-9165, 2022.