Paleobiological Implications of Living Benthic
Foraminiferal Distributions in Northern Gulf of Mexico Sediments
Anthony C. Gary, Nancy Healy-Williams
Twenty-one box cores from the shelf and slope of the northern Gulf of Mexico
were sequentially sampled to a sediment depth of 20 cm and stained with Rose
Bengal. The water depth of the box-core samples ranged from 52 to 4,510 m. The
greater than 63 µm fraction of each sedimentary interval was examined for the
presence of stained (living) benthic
foraminifera. The down-core distribution of
living specimens are compared between a deltaic and a nondeltaic environment.
Forty-four species are epifaunal and 30 species infaunal. However, distinct
habitat differences exist between species of the same genus. Contrasting the
deltaic and nondeltaic environments, specimens from the deltaic samples occur in
greater abundance and to greater sediment depths (up to 20 cm) than those from
the nondeltaic environment, which occur to a maximum sediment depth of only 3
cm. These results demonstrate that considerable caution should be used and
generalizations avoided with regard to the microhabitat preferences of fossil
benthic
foraminifera.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91030©1988 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, 20-23 March 1988.