The Barrier Reef sediment apron: Tobacco Reef,Belize |
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Authors: | Ian G. Macintyre Richard R. Graus Peter N. Reinthal Mark M. Littler Diane S. Littler |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, 20560 Washington, D.C., USA;(2) Department of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Northern Virginia Community College, 3001 North Beauregard Street, 22311 Alexandria, Virginia, USA;(3) Department of Zoology, Duke University, 27706 Durham, North Carolina, USA;(4) Department of Botany, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, 20560 Washington D.C., USA |
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Abstract: | Sedimentological and biological surveys of the back-reef sediment apron of Tobacco Reef, a continuous segment of the Belizean Barrier Reef, reveal five distinct biogeological zones: (1) coralline-coral-Dictyota pavement, (2) Turbinaria-Sargassum rubble, (3) Laurencia-Acanthophora sand and gravel, (4) bare sand and 95 Thalassia sand. These zones parallel the entire 9-km reef. The distribution of these zones is related to the spatial patterns of fish herbivory, the size of bottom sediments, and the stability of the substrate. Sedimentological and hydrodynamic studies indicate that most of the sediments in this area are transported from the reef crest and fore reef during periods of storm or hurricane activity and that their size distribution is largely the result of differential transport by high bottom-water velocities during those periods. |
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