Tracing impact of El Niño Southern Oscillation on coastal hydrology using coral 87Sr/86Sr record from Lakshadweep, South-Eastern Arabian Sea

Sci Total Environ. 2022 Oct 15:843:157035. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157035. Epub 2022 Jun 30.

Abstract

El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is one of the dominant climate modes influencing global precipitation and temperature. ENSO has a large impact on the monsoonal precipitations over the Indian subcontinent and thereby influences hydrological conditions. Due to dearth of long-term instrumental records of the hydrological parameters on sufficient spatial resolution, it is difficult to assess the impact of ENSO on regional hydrology. Though several geochemical proxies have been used to reconstruct past ENSO events through tracing the changes in past hydrological and climatic parameters, however, such reconstructions are often complicated by the influence of multiple processes and/or factors and their nonlinear relation with the proxy records. In this study, Sr isotope composition (87Sr/86Sr) was measured in Porites coral from the Lakshadweep, south-eastern Arabian Sea to reconstruct past ENSO events and to trace its regional hydrological impacts. The high precision measurements of 87Sr/86Sr in Lakshadweep coral show resolvable variations ranging from 0.709080 to 0.709210. The 87Sr/86Sr record shows an inverse relation with Niño 3.4 record; lower values matched with El Niño years and higher values with La Niña years. Our investigation reveals that ENSO driven precipitation changes impacted submarine groundwater discharge (SGD) to the Minicoy Atoll and resulted in 87Sr/86Sr variations of the Minicoy Atoll water. Therefore, deviation from the average seawater 87Sr/86Sr value can be quantified in terms of SGD contribution to the Minicoy Atoll. Our estimates based on binary mixing between seawater and SGD 87Sr/86Sr suggest a significant supply of SGD, maximum up to ~20 % of the total volume of the Minicoy Atoll during La Niña years due to higher rainfall compared to El Niño years. This finding highlights potential application of coral 87Sr/86Sr record as an alternate proxy to reconstruct past ENSO events and to trace its quantitative impact on regional hydrology, chemical and nutrient fluxes to coastal oceans via SGD.

Keywords: (87)Sr/(86)Sr; Arabian Sea; Corals; ENSO; Lakshadweep; SGD.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Anthozoa* / chemistry
  • El Nino-Southern Oscillation*
  • Hydrology
  • Oceans and Seas
  • Strontium Isotopes* / analysis
  • Temperature

Substances

  • Strontium Isotopes