La. Hobson et Mr. Mcquoid, Pelagic diatom assemblages are good indicators of mixed water intrusions into Saanich Inlet, a stratified fjord in Vancouver Island, MARINE GEOL, 174(1-4), 2001, pp. 125-138
We assessed the potential importance of tidally-driven intrusions of autoch
thonous protistan plankton into Saanich Inlet, a fjord in Vancouver Island,
as potential sources of fossils in the fine intra-annual sediment laminati
ons of ODP cores. We determined the structure of protistan assemblages thro
ughout the Inlet during July 1995 at times of successive neap and spring ti
des. Results were compared to a concurrent physical study of tidal hows and
nutrient advection into and out of the Inlet, which allowed us to identify
protistan species indicative of mixed Satellite Channel and stratified Saa
nich Inlet waters. These identifications were either confirmed or rejected
by temporal analyses of protistan assemblages based on weekly sampling at t
wo fixed positions, one in Saanich Inlet and one in Sidney Channel from May
through October 1997, Results of both studies supported the hypothesis tha
t the presence of a suite of diatom species, including most Chaetoceros spp
., a large-celled variant of Skeletonema costatum and Thalassiosira rotula
indicates the intrusion of water with elevated levels of dissolved inorgani
c nitrogen into Saanich Inlet from the Strait of Georgia. This indicator gr
oup of species contained additional species, but not all were observed in l
arge numbers in 1997, Many of these species are important components of the
laminated sediments of Saanich Inlet, whose presence is probably indicativ
e of paleo-environmental conditions in the southern Strait of Georgia rathe
r than Saanich Inlet. Effects of tidal cycles on dinoflagellate and other f
lagellated cells, exclusive of mastigophorans, were inconclusive and additi
onal studies are required to elucidate details of their ecology in waters o
f the southern Strait of Georgia. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V, All rights
reserved.