Literature DB >> 27524855

How to react to shallow water hydrodynamics: The larger benthic foraminifera solution.

Antonino Briguglio1, Johann Hohenegger1.   

Abstract

Symbiont-bearing larger benthic foraminifera inhabit the photic zone to provide their endosymbiotic algae with light. Because of the hydrodynamic conditions of shallow water environments, tests of larger foraminifera can be entrained and transported by water motion. To resist water motion, these foraminifera have to build a test able to avoid transport or have to develop special mechanisms to attach themselves to substrate or to hide their test below sediment grains. For those species which resist transport by the construction of hydrodynamic convenient shapes, the calculation of hydrodynamic parameters of their test defines the energetic input they can resist and therefore the scenario where they can live in. Measuring the density, size and shape of every test, combined with experimental data, helps to define the best mathematical approach for the settling velocity and Reynolds number of every shell. The comparison between water motion at the sediment-water interface and the specimen-specific settling velocity helps to calculate the water depths at which, for a certain test type, transport, deposition and accumulation may occur. The results obtained for the investigated taxa show that the mathematical approach gives reliable results and can discriminate the hydrodynamic behaviour of different shapes. Furthermore, the study of the settling velocities, calculated for all the investigated taxa, shows that several species are capable to resist water motion and therefore they appear to be functionally adapted to the hydrodynamic condition of its specific environment. The same study is not recommended on species which resist water motion by adopting hiding or anchoring strategies to avoid the effect of water motion.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Settling velocity; Shape entropy; Shell morphology; Tests distribution; Transport

Year:  2011        PMID: 27524855      PMCID: PMC4979689          DOI: 10.1016/j.marmicro.2011.07.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mar Micropaleontol        ISSN: 0377-8398            Impact factor:   2.415


  1 in total

1.  Wave-induced hydraulic forces on submerged aquatic plants in shallow lakes.

Authors:  J Schutten; J Dainty; A J Davy
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2004-03       Impact factor: 4.357

  1 in total
  7 in total

1.  New results on the hydrodynamic behaviour of fossil Nummulites tests from two nummulite banks from the Bartonian and Priabonian of northern Italy.

Authors:  Mona Seddighi; Antonino Briguglio; Johann Hohenegger; Cesare Andrea Papazzoni
Journal:  Boll Soc Paleontol Ital       Date:  2015-09-01       Impact factor: 1.969

2.  AXIALLY ORIENTED SECTIONS OF NUMMULITIDS: A TOOL TO INTERPRET LARGER BENTHIC FORAMINIFERAL DEPOSITS.

Authors:  Johann Hohenegger; Antonino Briguglio
Journal:  J Foraminifer Res       Date:  2012-04-01       Impact factor: 1.222

3.  Growth oscillation in larger foraminifera.

Authors:  Antonino Briguglio; Johann Hohenegger
Journal:  Paleobiology       Date:  2014       Impact factor: 2.892

4.  PALEOBIOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS OF THREE-DIMENSIONAL BIOMETRY ON LARGER BENTHIC FORAMINIFERA: A NEW ROUTE OF DISCOVERIES.

Authors:  Antonino Briguglio; Johann Hohenegger; György Less
Journal:  J Foraminifer Res       Date:  2013-01-01       Impact factor: 1.222

5.  Growth of Heterostegina depressa under natural and laboratory conditions.

Authors:  Wolfgang Eder; Antonino Briguglio; Johann Hohenegger
Journal:  Mar Micropaleontol       Date:  2015-11-15       Impact factor: 2.415

6.  Middle to Late Eocene paleoenvironmental changes in a marine transgressive sequence from the northern Tethyan margin (Adelholzen, Germany).

Authors:  Holger Gebhardt; Stjepan Ćorić; Robert Darga; Antonino Briguglio; Bettina Schenk; Winfried Werner; Nils Andersen; Benjamin Sames
Journal:  Austrian J Earth Sci       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 0.800

7.  Morphometric analysis of Eocene nummulitids in western and central Cuba: taxonomy, biostratigraphy and evolutionary trends.

Authors:  Ana I Torres-Silva; Wolfgang Eder; Johann Hohenegger; Antonino Briguglio
Journal:  J Syst Palaeontol       Date:  2018-04-13       Impact factor: 2.566

  7 in total

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