IIMYC   23581
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES MARINAS Y COSTERAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
OPAL PHYTOLITH AND ISOTOPIC STUDIES OF "RESTINGA" COMMUNITIES ON THE COASTAL PLAIN OF MARICÁ, RJ, BRAZIL, AS A MODERN REFERENCE FOR PALEOBIOGEOCLIMATIC RECONSTRUCTION
Autor/es:
CATIA PEREIRA DOS SANTOS; HELOISA GOMES COE; NATALIA BORRELLI; ANDRE LUIZ CARVALHO DA SILVA; LEANDRO DE OLIVEIRA FURTADO DE SOUSA; YAME BRONZE MEDINA RAMOS; CAROLINA PEREIRA SILVESTRE; AMANDA PACHECO SEIXAS
Revista:
BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF OCEANOGRAPHY
Editorial:
INST OCEANOGRAFICO
Referencias:
Lugar: São Paulo; Año: 2015 vol. 63 p. 255 - 270
ISSN:
1679-8759
Resumen:
The Maricá restinga, located in the eastern part of the Rio de Janeiro State (Brazil), corresponds to one of the few remaining preserved areas of the state´s coastal plain. This paper reports on a study of the Maricá restinga plant communities and also presents an identification of the main plant species present in each community, with the objective of establishing reference collections, by the methods of the proxies opal phytoliths and stable carbon isotopes, for paleoenvironmental reconstructions of this coastal area during the Quaternary. Six plant communities, distributed perpendicularly to the coast line over sandy barriers, lagoonal plain, lagoon margin and weathered basement were identified: halophile-psamophile, scrub, herbaceous swamp, slack, shrubby vegetation and dry forest. In general, the plant species analyzed in each community presented low productivity of opal phytoliths, as only thePoaceae, Cyperaceae and Arecaceae families produce a great amount and diversity of morphotypes of opal phytoliths. The results of the analysis of stable carbon isotopes in sediments indicated a predominance of C3 or a mixture of C3 and C4 plants, presenting a close correlation with the results found in plants collected in each community. In conclusion, it was verified that the carbon isotope analysis associated with that of the opal phytoliths are good proxies for the reconstruction of vegetation in the study area.