Title of article :
SHE Analysis for Biozone Identification among foraminiferal sediment assemblages on reefs and in associated sediment around St. Kitts, Eastern Caribbean Sea, and its environmental significance
Author/Authors :
Wilson، نويسنده , , Brent and Orchard، نويسنده , , Kate and Phillip، نويسنده , , Jason، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
Sixteen nearshore (≤ 1 m water depth) sediment samples, termed Sample Set 1, were collected from the eastern and south-western coasts of the South East Peninsula (SEP) of St. Kitts. Twelve samples termed Sample Set 2 were taken from nearby fringing (6–17 m) and offshore (~ 18–25 m) reefs. The sample sets were analysed separately using SHE Analysis for Biozone Identification (SHEBI), α and β diversities and complementarity. SHEBI is a statistical technique that determines abundance biozones (ABs) using the entire vector of species abundances in samples, species richness S, the information function H, and the equitability index E. Alpha diversity expresses the diversity within an AB, while β diversity quantifies diversity changes between adjacent ABs. Complementarity assesses the permeability of AB boundaries.
divided Sample Set 1 into five ABs but did not distinguish separate bays. Beta diversities reflected the highest and lowest α diversities at Mosquito Bay and South Friarʹs Beach\Frigate Bay respectively. Complementarity was highest between two ABs in South Friarʹs Bay, indicating a close relationship between shoreline sediment and material marginally farther offshore. It was lowest between Whitehouse and South Friarʹs Bays. The assemblages along this transect were rich in Discorbis rosea.
mple Set 2, samples were accumulated for SHEBI by depth. SHEBI distinguished four ABs (three on the fringing reefs) characterised by differing percentages of Asterigerina carinata, Archaias angulatus and Amphistegina gibbosa. Comparison between Sample Sets 1 and 2 indicates that during storms sediment moves shoreward from the fringing reefs. Foraminifera show that there is less movement of sediment > 63 μm from the shoreline (Sample Set 1) to the fringing and deeper reefs.
Keywords :
hurricanes , Discorbis rosea , SHEBI , Amphistegina gibbosa , Asterigerina carinata , Archaias angulatus
Journal title :
Marine Micropaleontology
Journal title :
Marine Micropaleontology