Download - Bivalve workshop May 2009

Transcript
Page 1: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Seasonal stable isotope composition of bivalve growth

increments and ambient water in the rivers Rhine and Meuse

Emma VersteeghHubert Vonhof, Simon Troelstra, Dick Kroon

Page 2: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Freshwater mussels

Species: Unio pictorum & U. tumidus

Aragonite shells

Seasonal growth increments

Page 3: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Oxygen isotopes

Meuse

Low δ18O in winter due to depleted precipitation

High δ18O in summer due to increased evaporation and enriched summer precipitation

Rhine

Additional factor: Alpine snow melt in summer → negative excursions in summer

Page 4: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

δ18O rivers

Snow melt

High discharge

Flood

Dry summer

Page 5: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Research questions

• Can shell incremental stable isotope chemistry be used as a proxy of past seasonal changes in river water composition?– Are δ18Oar values in shells in equilibrium with δ18Ow values of

ambient water?– Are seasonal δ13CHCO3- patterns within river water recorded in the

range of δ13C values within shell aragonite?

• Can we calculate intra-seasonal growth rates by matching relationships between stable oxygen and carbon isotope chemistry of river water and shell records?

• What are the environmental factors driving seasonal growth rate changes?

Page 6: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Monitoring experiment: collecting and tagging Unionids

Page 7: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Monitoring experiment: cages in fish ladders

Page 8: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Monitoring locations

Page 9: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Methods

• Water sampling

• Microsampling– Merchantek Micromill

• Stable isotopes– Finnigan Delta+ with

Gasbench II

Page 10: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Predicted shell δ18O

Water δ18O & T → shell δ18O

1000 ln α = 2.559 (106 T-2) + 0.175

Grossman & Ku (1986); Dettman et al. (1999)

Page 11: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Predicted shell δ18OMeuse Lek (Rhine distributary)

Page 12: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

δ13C of HCO3-

Page 13: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Shell δ18O records

Page 14: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Shell δ13C records

Page 15: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Matching shell and water records

Page 16: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Matching shell and water records

Page 17: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Intra-seasonal growth

Page 18: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Conclusions• Unio pictorum and U. tumidus precipitate their

shell in oxygen isotopic equilibrium with ambient water

• Seasonal variation in δ13C values of dissolved inorganic carbon are recorded in shell aragonite

• Growth onset and cessation are induced by water temperature

• Growth rate is mainly influenced by food availability (primary productivity)

• Unionid stable isotope chemistry can serve as a proxy for past water composition (and related floods, droughts, primary productivity)

Page 19: Bivalve workshop May 2009

Bivalve Workshop, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, 4-5 May 2009

Thank you!