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Bioturbation increases time averaging despite promoting shell disintegration; a test using anthropogenic gradients in sediment accumulation and burrowing on the Southern California Shelf

Adam Tomasovych, Susan M. Kidwell, Ran Dai, Clark R. Alexander, Darrell S. Kaufman, Stewart Edie, Jill S. Leonard-Pingel, Jesse E. McNinch, Thomas Parker and Heidi M. Wadman
Bioturbation increases time averaging despite promoting shell disintegration; a test using anthropogenic gradients in sediment accumulation and burrowing on the Southern California Shelf
Paleobiology (August 2024) 50 (3): 424-451

Abstract

Bioturbation can increase time averaging by downward and upward movements of young and old shells within the entire mixed layer and by accelerating the burial of shells into a sequestration zone (SZ), allowing them to bypass the uppermost taphonomically active zone (TAZ). However, bioturbation can increase shell disintegration concurrently, neutralizing the positive effects of mixing on time averaging. Bioirrigation by oxygenated pore-water promotes carbonate dissolution in the TAZ, and biomixing itself can mill shells weakened by dissolution or microbial maceration, and/or expose them to damage at the sediment-water interface. Here, we fit transition rate matrices to bivalve age-frequency distributions from four sediment cores from the southern California middle shelf (50-75 m) to assess the competing effects of bioturbation on disintegration and time averaging, exploiting a strong gradient in rates of sediment accumulation and bioturbation created by historic wastewater pollution. We find that disintegration covaries positively with mixing at all four sites, in accord with the scenario where bioturbation ultimately fuels carbonate disintegration. Both mixing and disintegration rates decline abruptly at the base of the 20- to 40-cm-thick, age-homogenized surface mixed layer at the three well-bioturbated sites, despite different rates of sediment accumulation. In contrast, mixing and disintegration rates are very low in the upper 25 cm at an effluent site with legacy sediment toxicity, despite recolonization by bioirrigating lucinid bivalves. Assemblages that formed during maximum wastewater emissions vary strongly in time averaging, with millennial scales at the low-sediment accumulation non-effluent sites, a centennial scale at the effluent site where sediment accumulation was high but bioturbation recovered quickly, and a decadal scale at the second high-sedimentation effluent site where bioturbation remained low for decades. Thus, even though disintegration rates covary positively with mixing rates, reducing postmortem shell survival, bioturbation has the net effect of increasing the time averaging of skeletal remains on this warm-temperate siliciclastic shelf.


ISSN: 0094-8373
EISSN: 1938-5331
Coden: PALBBM
Serial Title: Paleobiology
Serial Volume: 50
Serial Issue: 3
Title: Bioturbation increases time averaging despite promoting shell disintegration; a test using anthropogenic gradients in sediment accumulation and burrowing on the Southern California Shelf
Affiliation: Slovak Academy of Sciences, Earth Science Institute, Bratislava, Slovakia
Pages: 424-451
Published: 202408
Text Language: English
Publisher: Paleontological Society, Lawrence, KS, United States
References: 179
Accession Number: 2025-004193
Categories: Invertebrate paleontology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Annotation: NSF Grant EAR-112418
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 5 tables, geol. sketch map
N33°30'00" - N33°45'00", W118°30'00" - W118°15'00"
Secondary Affiliation: University of Chicago, USA, United StatesUniversity of Nebraska at Omaha, USA, United StatesUniversity of Georgia, USA, United StatesNorthern Arizona University, USA, United StatesU. S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center, USA, United StatesCounty Sanitation Districts of Los Angeles County, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2025, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, The Paleontological Society. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 2025
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