Shallow-Marine, Benthic Ecosystems Show Compositional Shifts in Response
to the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) on the Adriatic Carbonate
Platform
Abstract
The response of shallow-marine ecosystems to the Paleocene-Eocene
Thermal Maximum (PETM) is understudied, and analyses that do exist
typically focus on larger benthic foraminifera and coral-algal reef
mound evolution. Here we investigate the dynamics of benthic marine
assemblages across the PETM in the Kozina and Čebulovica sections
(Slovenia) on the Adriatic Carbonate Platform. Our results show
significant ecological changes associated with the PETM with a
protracted recovery into Shallow Benthic Zone (SBZ) 6. The compositional
change corresponds to the reduced dominance of red algae, a turnover in
the dominant larger benthic foraminifera and increased assemblage
homogeneity. These changes are not associated with a lithofacies
transition, as a shift from reefal mounds to a foraminiferal-dominated
carbonate platform occurs prior to the Paleocene/Eocene boundary. The
investigated sections also show a transition from coral-algal mounds to
microbial mounds during SBZ 4, but the main difference between these
reef types is the increased dominance of the microbes. Moreover, there
is no unequivocal evidence that either reef type persisted into the
Eocene in this region. Whilst the PETM is not an extinction event,
except for deep-sea benthic foraminifera, the ecological changes
recorded show that the ecosystem responses at the PETM are consistent
with other hyperthermal events.