Highlights
- The response of anchialine caves to anthropogenic disturbance is poorly understood
- Eve’s Pond in Bermuda was infilled with dredge spoil in the mid-20th century
- It was speculated that Eve’s Pond was originally connected to the Green Bay Cave System
- A core-based analysis of sediment and benthic foraminifera assess potential impact of infilling on cave benthos
- Dredge spoils were documented in cave stratigraphy, with foraminifera negligibly impacted by infilling event
Abstract
In the mid-20th century, an inland brackish pond from Bermuda, known as Eve’s Pond, was filled with marine sediment from an adjacent coastal lagoon. At this time, an eyewitness reported “…sediment billowing out of the Green Bay Cave for days…”, which is a marine-dominated anchialine cave located proximal to the former location of Eve’s Pond (~200 m). The purpose of this study was to evaluate the potential impact of this infilling event on cave sedimentation and benthic meiofaunal communities, as proxied by the unicellular protists foraminifera that remain preserved in the sediment record. Eight sediment cores were collected from an underwater passage in Green Bay Cave in a transect towards the location where Eve’s Pond was surveyed in 1901 CE. The sediment cores were analyzed for visual and density changes (photography, X-radiography), textural variability, benthic foraminifera fauna and diversity, and radiocarbon dating. The recovered sediment cores mostly sampled a late Holocene carbonate mud facies that had been described during previous research in the cave, with benthic foraminiferal assemblages post-dating the onset of seawater circulating between the saline groundwater flooding the cave and the adjacent Harrington Sound ~1,900 years ago. However, two cores located further into the cave (cores 13 and 17) contain a carbonate sand layer with lagoon foraminifera that is anomalous with respect to the Holocene depositional history of the cave and is most likely related to the mid-20th century infilling of Eve’s Pond. Examination of these two cores showed that after the infilling event, the community of benthic foraminifera rapidly reverted to pre-impact assemblages with foraminiferal stygophiles (e.g., Spirophthalmidium emaciatum, Sigmoilina tenuis), which were not displaced by new colonizers introduced into the cave by the dredge spoils. We caution that the results cannot be extrapolated to the pelagic crustacean community, but the results suggest that this physical sedimentary disturbance only minimally impacted the benthic foraminifera community in the cave passages that were sampled.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.5038/1827-806X.46.3.2128
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License
Recommended Citation
Cresswell, Jacquelyn N.; Peter J. van Hengstum; Thomas M. Iliffe; Bruce E. Williams; and Gil Nolan.
2017.
Anthropogenic infilling of a Bermudian sinkhole and its impact on sedimentation and benthic foraminifera in the adjacent anchialine cave environment.
International Journal of Speleology,
46: 409-425.
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/ijs/vol46/iss3/7