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Evidence of coral reef accretion Evidence of coral reef accretion under unique environmental under unique environmental conditions: The Mid-Holocene fossil conditions: The Mid-Holocene fossil reefs of the Enriquillo Valley of reefs of the Enriquillo Valley of Southwestern Dominican Republic Southwestern Dominican Republic David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR Clark E. Sherman, Ph.D. Dept. Marine Sciences, UPR-Mayagüez, PR Wilson Ramírez, Ph.D. Dept. of Geology, UPR-Mayagüez, PR Dennis K. Hubbard, Ph.D. Dept. of Geology, Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH Geol. Soc. of America Southeastern Section Meeting March 20-22, 2013, San Juan, Puerto Rico Section T12: Quaternary Caribbean Reef Systems

David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

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Evidence of coral reef accretion under unique environmental conditions: The Mid-Holocene fossil reefs of the Enriquillo Valley of Southwestern Dominican Republic. David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR Clark E. Sherman, Ph.D. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Evidence of coral reef accretion under Evidence of coral reef accretion under unique environmental conditions: The Mid-unique environmental conditions: The Mid-

Holocene fossil reefs of the Enriquillo Valley Holocene fossil reefs of the Enriquillo Valley of Southwestern Dominican Republicof Southwestern Dominican Republic

David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D.US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Clark E. Sherman, Ph.D.Dept. Marine Sciences, UPR-Mayagüez, PR

Wilson Ramírez, Ph.D.Dept. of Geology, UPR-Mayagüez, PR

Dennis K. Hubbard, Ph.D.Dept. of Geology, Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH

Geol. Soc. of America Southeastern Section MeetingMarch 20-22, 2013, San Juan, Puerto Rico

Section T12: Quaternary Caribbean Reef Systems

Page 2: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Statement of the Problem• High sedimentation

rates/resuspension is one of the primary causes for coral reef decline in many areas of the world.

• Yet, there is evidence of coral reefs that thrive in environments of very high sedimentation (e.g. inner reefs within the GBR in Australia)

• Natural vs. Anthropogenic induced sedimentation:– Is there really a difference?– If there is a difference, are the

effects on coral reefs different also?

Ikonos Image Mayagüez Bay, Western PR. (Courtesy of GERS Lab, Dept. Of Geology, UPRM)

Inner reefs in Mayagüez Bay with no coral and abundant macroalgae (Photo by J. Morelock)

Page 3: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Natural vs. anthropogenic

• Some limitations:– Earliest coral reef studies date back only to

the 1950’s– Possible changes within the coral reef require

long time

• Ecologists are looking at the fossil record.– If fine-scale changes documented over the

past decades are shown to be unique, then human impact comes as a reasonable explanation

Page 4: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Fossil Approach

• Study records of well-preserved fossil reefs in detail

• Compare the documented changes with those occurring in modern reef.

• Already been implemented in several studies (e.g. Pandolfi and Jackson, 2001; Aronson et al. 1998; 2002)

Page 5: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Previous Studies (Cont.)

Drill Cores (by C. Sherman)

Pleistocene Fossil Coral Reef, Curaçao, Netherlands Antilles

Page 6: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Cañada Honda Site

From Cuevas et al. (2009)

Page 7: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Study site

Modified from Mann et al. (2002)

Page 8: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Regional cross section across central Hispaniola (from Draper et al. 1994)

Page 9: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Landsat Image of SW Dominican Republic(Front cover of the 9th Caribbean Geological Conference)

Cordillera Central

Cuenca de San Juan

Sierra de Neiba

Cuenca de Enriquillo

Sierra de Bahoruco

Page 10: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

General Geology

Page 11: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Haiti

Haiti

Bahia Enriquillo

Lago Enriquillo

Modified from Hubbard et al. 2008

10,000 CalBP

ca. 3-4 kybp - Closure

Page 12: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Modified fromBudd et al. 2006

Page 13: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Why these reefs?• Well-preserved subaerial

exposures (~10,000-4,000 yrs. ago, Mann et al, 1984; Taylor et al. 1985)

• The record allows for close examination of reef changes

• Influenced by high terrigenous sedimentation, before humans inhabited Hispaniola

Page 14: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Upstream Las Clavellinas Site

Bed of Acropora cervicornis

Sand and silt

Page 15: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Vertical Transect

Page 16: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

• Comparison with modern reef community structure data from Southwestern Puerto Rico

Data summarized in Morelock et al. (2001)

Page 17: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Results

Community Structure:

• At least 22 species of Scleractinian corals (in transects)

• Siderastrea siderea most abundant (47.4%) followed by Montastraea faveolata (8.73%)

• Two major coral zones:– Branching coral zone– Siderastrea siderea zone

• Mix-coral subzone• Massive coral subzone• Platy coral subzone

Page 18: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Coral Species Distribution

Page 19: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Stratigraphy of CH, transect and coral sample location, and stratigraphy

Page 20: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Coral Morphologies

Page 21: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Coral Morphology

• Most morphologies typical of high sedimentation settings

Page 22: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Hubbard, 2005

High sedimentation

Page 23: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Sediment bands

Page 24: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Comparison with SW Puerto Rico

Page 25: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Results (cont.)

Sediment composition:

• The Cañada Honda fossil reef sediment is characterized by the high percentage of carbonate material.

• Carbonate varied from 84% to 96 %.

• A significant portion of CaCO3 from allochtonous (terrigenous) sediment

Page 26: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Model for sediment mineralogy in CH

Page 27: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Abundance (%) of constituent grains in CH sediment

Echinoid3.3%

Foraminifera0.5%

Sponges0.7%

Barnacles3.5%

Serpulid worms1.3%

Quartz/Feldspar0.5%

Bivalve15.2%

Gastropods5.1%

Calcareos algae0.1%

Red algae/Bryozoa0.3%

Coral21.1%

Non-skeletal48.5%

Page 28: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Discussion

• Coral community structure in Cañada Honda has distinctive features characteristic of siltation stress:– Remarkable abundance of sediment tolerant

coral species (e.g. S. siderea, M. faveolata, Agaricia spp.)

– Coral cover dominated mostly by two species• Large colonies, few juveniles

– Sediment bands within coral skeleton– Growth morphology (i.e. encrusting domes,

plates, cones).

Page 29: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Discussion (cont.)

• A. cervicornis zone similar to sites in protected environments with limited wave action throughout the Caribbean

• Unique assemblage in CH– Overwhelming abundances of Siderastrea

spp. – Absence of important coral genera (Diploria,

Mycetophyllia, Meandrina)

Page 30: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Discussion (cont.)• Coral development at

depths of ~10-12 m.– In typical reefs under

siltation stress corals do not grow beyond depths of ~10 m).

• High nutrients?:– phytoplanktonturbidity?– High abundance of

macroborers (Lithophaga and barnacles)

• High carbonate (CaCO3) content of terrigenous and reef sediment

Page 31: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Unique conditions in Cañada Honda

• Other studies have documented high salinity fluctuations (Greer and Swart, 2006)– Could explain high abundance of Siderastrea spp.

and the absence of other important genera

• High content of CaCO3 in terrigenous sediment allowed better light penetration

• Sedimentation events probably occurred sporadic, allowing time for reef corals to “keep-up” with rising sea-level and high sediment input.

Page 32: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Lessons from Cañada Honda

• Yes, coral reefs thrive within natural conditions of high sedimentation– Substantial evidence for siltation stress

• Highly resilient communities over thousands of years– Storms events– Mid-Holocene Thermal Maximum

• Greer and Swart 2006; Greer et al. 2009

Page 33: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Conclusions• Although there is evidence for high sediment

influx, the Cañada Honda fossil reef thrived and accreted for at least 3,000 years.

• Unique conditions:Protected marine setting + semiarid

conditions + high salinity fluctuations + high terrigenous sediment with high CaCO3

• Development of the CH reef occurred under conditions of high sedimentation and depths close to 10-12m.

• The high content of CaCO3 of the sediment

allowed more light penetration.

• Sedimentation was probably sporadic, allowing time for reef corals to grow back and “keep-up” with sedimentation and rising sea-level.

Page 34: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Acknowledgments

• UPR-NASA Space Grant Program• AGEP program of UPRM• Southeastern section of the Geological Society of America• Center for Research and Development of UPRM• Sea Grant Program at UPRM.• NSF-EPSCoR program of the UPR. • Geology Department at UPRM• Marine Science Department at UPRM• The Faculty of Arts and Sciences –UPRM• Members of the thesis committee• The staff of Hospital San Antonio, Mayagüez, Puerto Rico• Vanessa Rosario, Viviana Díaz and Elisa Torres.• Dennis Hubbard, Karla Parsons-Hubbard and all the students from Oberlin

College that were involved.• Secretaría de Estado y Ambiente of the Dominican Republic.• The staff of Hotel Iguana in La Descubierta.

Page 35: David N. Cuevas Miranda, Ph.D. US EPA Caribbean Environmental Protection Division, Guaynabo, PR

Thank you!