skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Probing the Ecology and Climate of the Eocene Southern Ocean With Sand Tiger Sharks Striatolamia macrota
Abstract Many explanations for Eocene climate change focus on the Southern Ocean—where tectonics influenced oceanic gateways, ocean circulation reduced heat transport, and greenhouse gas declines prompted glaciation. To date, few studies focus on marine vertebrates at high latitudes to discern paleoecological and paleoenvironmental impacts of this climate transition. The Tertiary Eocene La Meseta (TELM) Formation has a rich fossil assemblage to characterize these impacts;Striatolamia macrota, an extinct (†) sand tiger shark, is abundant throughout the La Meseta Formation. Body size is often tracked to characterize and integrate across multiple ecological dimensions. †S. macrotabody size distributions indicate limited changes during TELMs 2–5 based on anterior tooth crown height (n = 450, mean = 19.6 ± 6.4 mm). Similarly, environmental conditions remained stable through this period based on δ18OPO4values from tooth enameloid (n = 42; 21.5 ± 1.6‰), which corresponds to a mean temperature of 22.0 ± 4.0°C. Our preliminaryεNd(n = 4) results indicate an early Drake Passage opening with Pacific inputs during TELM 2–3 (45–43 Ma) based on single unit variation with an overall radiogenic trend. Two possible hypotheses to explain these observations are (1) †S. macrotamodified its migration behavior to ameliorate environmental changes related to the Drake Passage opening, or (2) the local climate change was small and gateway opening had little impact. While we cannot rule out an ecological explanation, a comparison with climate model results suggests that increased CO2produces warm conditions that also parsimoniously explain the observations.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1842049 1842059
PAR ID:
10382034
Author(s) / Creator(s):
 ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  ;  
Publisher / Repository:
DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology
Volume:
35
Issue:
12
ISSN:
2572-4517
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract Eocene climate cooling, driven by the fallingpCO2and tectonic changes in the Southern Ocean, impacted marine ecosystems. Sharks in high‐latitude oceans, sensitive to these changes, offer insights into both environmental shifts and biological responses, yet few paleoecological studies exist. The Middle‐to‐Late Eocene units on Seymour Island, Antarctica, provide a rich, diverse fossil record, including sharks. We analyzed the oxygen isotope composition of phosphate from shark tooth bioapatite (δ18Op) and compared our results to co‐occurring bivalves and predictions from an isotope‐enabled global climate model to investigate habitat use and environmental conditions. Bulk δ18Opvalues (mean 22.0 ± 1.3‰) show no significant changes through the Eocene. Furthermore, the variation in bulk δ18Opvalues often exceeds that in simulated seasonal and regional values. Pelagic and benthic sharks exhibit similar δ18Opvalues across units but are offset relative to bivalve and modeled values. Some taxa suggest movements into warmer or more brackish waters (e.g.,Striatolamia,Carcharias) or deeper, colder waters (e.g.,Pristiophorus). Taxa likeRajaandSqualusdisplay no shift, tracking local conditions in Seymour Island. The lack of difference in δ18Opvalues between pelagic and benthic sharks in the Late Eocene could suggest a poorly stratified water column, inconsistent with a fully opened Drake Passage. Our findings demonstrate that shark tooth bioapatite tracks the preferred habitat conditions for individual taxa rather than recording environmental conditions where they are found. A lack of secular variation in δ18Opvalues says more about species ecology than the absence of regional or global environmental changes. 
    more » « less
  2. Abstract. The Southern Ocean is highly under-sampled for the purpose of assessing total carbon uptake and its variability. Since this region dominates the mean global ocean sink for anthropogenic carbon, understanding temporal change is critical. Underway measurements of pCO2 collected as part of the Drake Passage Time-series (DPT) program that began in 2002 inform our understanding of seasonally changing air–sea gradients in pCO2, and by inference the carbon flux in this region. Here, we utilize available pCO2 observations to evaluate how the seasonal cycle, interannual variability, and long-term trends in surface ocean pCO2 in the Drake Passage region compare to that of the broader subpolar Southern Ocean. Our results indicate that the Drake Passage is representative of the broader region in both seasonality and long-term pCO2 trends, as evident through the agreement of timing and amplitude of seasonal cycles as well as trend magnitudes both seasonally and annually. The high temporal density of sampling by the DPT is critical to constraining estimates of the seasonal cycle of surface pCO2 in this region, as winter data remain sparse in areas outside of the Drake Passage. An increase in winter data would aid in reduction of uncertainty levels. On average over the period 2002–2016, data show that carbon uptake has strengthened with annual surface ocean pCO2 trends in the Drake Passage and the broader subpolar Southern Ocean less than the global atmospheric trend. Analysis of spatial correlation shows Drake Passage pCO2 to be representative of pCO2 and its variability up to several hundred kilometers away from the region. We also compare DPT data from 2016 and 2017 to contemporaneous pCO2 estimates from autonomous biogeochemical floats deployed as part of the Southern Ocean Carbon and Climate Observations and Modeling project (SOCCOM) so as to highlight the opportunity for evaluating data collected on autonomous observational platforms. Though SOCCOM floats sparsely sample the Drake Passage region for 2016–2017 compared to the Drake Passage Time-series, their pCO2 estimates fall within the range of underway observations given the uncertainty on the estimates. Going forward, continuation of the Drake Passage Time-series will reduce uncertainties in Southern Ocean carbon uptake seasonality, variability, and trends, and provide an invaluable independent dataset for post-deployment assessment of sensors on autonomous floats. Together, these datasets will vastly increase our ability to monitor change in the ocean carbon sink. 
    more » « less
  3. We investigate the role of Southern Ocean topography and wind stress in the deep and abyssal ocean overturning and water mass composition using a suite of idealized global ocean circulation models. Specifically, we address how the presence of a meridional ridge in the vicinity of Drake Passage and the formation of an associated Southern Ocean gyre influence the water mass composition of the abyssal cell. Our experiments are carried out using a numerical representation of the global ocean circulation in an idealized two-basin geometry under varying wind stress and Drake Passage ridge height. In the presence of a low Drake Passage ridge, the overall strength of the meridional overturning circulation is primarily influenced by wind stress, with a topographically induced weakening of the middepth cell and concurrent strengthening of the abyssal cell occurring only after ridge height passes 2500 m. Passive tracer experiments show that a strengthening middepth cell leads to increased abyssal ventilation by North Atlantic water masses, as more North Atlantic Deep Water (NADW) enters the Southern Ocean and then spreads into the Indo-Pacific. We repeat our tracer experiments without restoring in the high-latitude Southern Ocean in order to identify the origin of water masses that circulate through the Southern Ocean before sinking into the abyss as Antarctic Bottom Water. Our results from these “exchange” tracer experiments show that an increasing ridge height in Drake Passage and the concurrent gyre spinup lead to substantially decreased NADW-origin waters in the abyssal ocean, as more surface waters from north of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) are transferred into the Antarctic Bottom Water formation region. Significance StatementThe objective of this study is to investigate how topographic features in the Southern Ocean can affect the overall structure of Earth’s large-scale ocean circulation and the distribution of water masses in the abyssal ocean. We focus on the Southern Ocean because the region is of central importance for exchange between the Atlantic and Indo-Pacific Ocean basins and for CO2and heat uptake into the abyssal ocean. Our results indicate that Southern Ocean topography plays a major role in the overall circulation by 1) controlling the direct transfer of abyssal waters from the Atlantic to the Indo-Pacific via its influence on the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation and 2) controlling the coupling between the abyssal ocean and surface waters north of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current via the Southern Ocean gyre. 
    more » « less
  4. Abstract Large Oligocene Antarctic ice sheets co-existed with warm proximal waters offshore Wilkes Land. Here we provide a broader Southern Ocean perspective to such warmth by reconstructing the strength and variability of the Oligocene Australian-Antarctic latitudinal sea surface temperature gradient. Our Oligocene TEX 86 -based sea surface temperature record from offshore southern Australia shows temperate (20–29 °C) conditions throughout, despite northward tectonic drift. A persistent sea surface temperature gradient (~5–10 °C) exists between Australia and Antarctica, which increases during glacial intervals. The sea surface temperature gradient increases from ~26 Ma, due to Antarctic-proximal cooling. Meanwhile, benthic foraminiferal oxygen isotope decline indicates ice loss/deep-sea warming. These contrasting patterns are difficult to explain by greenhouse gas forcing alone. Timing of the sea surface temperature cooling coincides with deepening of Drake Passage and matches results of ocean model experiments that demonstrate that Drake Passage opening cools Antarctic proximal waters. We conclude that Drake Passage deepening cooled Antarctic coasts which enhanced thermal isolation of Antarctica. 
    more » « less
  5. Shark teeth are one of the most abundant vertebrate fossils, and because tooth size generally correlates with body size, their accumulations document the size structure of populations. Understanding how ecological and environmental processes influence size structure, and how this extends to influence these dental distributions, may offer a window into the ecological and environmental dynamics of past and present shark populations. Here, we examine the dental distributions of sand tigers, including extant Carcharias taurus and extinct Striatolamia macrota , to reconstruct the size structure for a contemporary locality and four Eocene localities. We compare empirical distributions against expectations from a population simulation to gain insight into potential governing ecological processes. Specifically, we investigate the influence of dispersal flexibility to and from protected nurseries. We show that changing the flexibility of initial dispersal of juveniles from the nursery and annual migration of adults to the nursery explains a large amount of dental distribution variability. Our framework predicts dispersal strategies of an extant sand tiger population, and supports nurseries as important components of sand tiger life history in both extant and Eocene populations. These results suggest nursery protection may be vital for shark conservation with increasing anthropogenic impacts and climate change. 
    more » « less