Georges Paradis
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Featured researches published by Georges Paradis.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2004
Yair Rosenthal; Suzanne Perron-Cashman; Caroline H. Lear; Edouard Bard; Stephen Barker; Katharina Billups; Martha Bryan; Margaret Lois Delaney; Peter B. deMenocal; Gary S. Dwyer; Henry Elderfield; Chris R. German; Mervyn Greaves; David W. Lea; Thomas M. Marchitto; Dorothy K. Pak; Georges Paradis; Ann D. Russell; Ralph R Schneider; K. D. Scheiderich; Lowell D. Stott; Kazuyo Tachikawa; Eric J. Tappa; Robert C. Thunell; Michael W. Wara; Syee Weldeab; Paul A. Wilson
Thirteen laboratories from the USA and Europe participated in an intercomparison study of Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca measurements in foraminifera. The study included five planktonic species from surface sediments from different geographical regions and water depths. Each of the laboratories followed their own cleaning and analytical procedures and had no specific information about the samples. Analysis of solutions of known Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca ratios showed that the intralaboratory instrumental precision is better than 0.5% for both Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca measurements, regardless whether ICP-OES or ICP-MS is used. The interlaboratory precision on the analysis of standard solutions was about 1.5% and 0.9% for Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca measurements, respectively. These are equivalent to Mg/Ca-based temperature repeatability and reproducibility on the analysis of solutions of ±0.2°C and ±0.5°C, respectively. The analysis of foraminifera suggests an interlaboratory variance of about ±8% (%RSD) for Mg/Ca measurements, which translates to reproducibility of about ±2–3°C. The relatively large range in the reproducibility of foraminiferal analysis is primarily due to relatively poor intralaboratory repeatability (about ±1–2°C) and a bias (about 1°C) due to the application of different cleaning methods by different laboratories. Improving the consistency of cleaning methods among laboratories will, therefore, likely lead to better reproducibility. Even more importantly, the results of this study highlight the need for standards calibration among laboratories as a first step toward improving interlaboratory compatibility.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2008
Mervyn Greaves; Nicolas Caillon; H. Rebaubier; G. Bartoli; Steven M. Bohaty; Isabel Cacho; Leon J. Clarke; C. Daunt; Mary Lally Delaney; Peter B. deMenocal; A. Dutton; Stephen M. Eggins; Henry Elderfield; D. Garbe-Schoenberg; Ethan A. Goddard; D. Green; Jeroen Groeneveld; David W. Hastings; Ed C. Hathorne; Katsunori Kimoto; Gary P. Klinkhammer; Laurent Labeyrie; David W. Lea; Thomas M. Marchitto; M. A. Martínez-Botí; Peter Graham Mortyn; Y. Ni; D. Nuernberg; Georges Paradis; L. D. Pena
An interlaboratory study of Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca ratios in three commercially available carbonate reference materials (BAM RS3, CMSI 1767, and ECRM 752-1) was performed with the participation of 25 laboratories that determine foraminiferal Mg/Ca ratios worldwide. These reference materials containing Mg/Ca in the range of foraminiferal calcite (0.8 mmol/mol to 6 mmol/mol) were circulated with a dissolution protocol for analysis. Participants were asked to make replicate dissolutions of the powdered samples and to analyze them using the instruments and calibration standards routinely used in their laboratories. Statistical analysis was performed in accordance with the International Standardization Organization standard 5725, which is based on the analysis of variance (ANOVA) technique. Repeatability (RSDr%), an indicator of intralaboratory precision, for Mg/Ca determinations in solutions after centrifuging increased with decreasing Mg/Ca, ranging from 0.78% at Mg/Ca = 5.56 mmol/mol to 1.15% at Mg/Ca = 0.79 mmol/mol. Reproducibility (RSDR%), an indicator of the interlaboratory method precision, for Mg/Ca determinations in centrifuged solutions was noticeably worse than repeatability, ranging from 4.5% at Mg/Ca = 5.56 mmol/mol to 8.7% at Mg/Ca = 0.79 mmol/mol. Results of this study show that interlaboratory variability is dominated by inconsistencies among instrument calibrations and highlight the need to improve interlaboratory compatibility. Additionally, the study confirmed the suitability of these solid standards as reference materials for foraminiferal Mg/Ca (and Sr/Ca) determinations, provided that appropriate procedures are adopted to minimize and to monitor possible contamination from silicate mineral phases.
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2003
Danielle C. Zacherl; Georges Paradis; David W. Lea
The trace elemental composition of calcified larval hard parts may serve as useful tags of natal origin for invertebrate population studies. We examine whether the trace metal barium (Ba) deposits into the calcium carbonate matrix of molluscan larval statolith and protoconch in proportion to seawater Ba concen- tration at two temperatures (11.5 and 17°C). We also examine strontium (Sr) uptake as a function of temperature. Using encapsulated larvae of the marine gastropod, Kelletia kelletii, reared in the laboratory under controlled conditions, we demonstrate a significant inverse effect of temperature and a positive effect of seawater Ba/Ca ratio on Ba incorporation into larval carbonates. Ba/Ca partition coefficients ( DBa )i n protoconch were 1.13 at 11.4°C and 0.88 at 17.1°C, while DBa in larval statolith measured 1.58 at 11.4°C and 1.29 at 17.1°C. Strontium incorporation into statoliths is also inversely affected by temperature, but there was a significant positive effect of temperature on Sr incorporation into protoconch. These data suggest larval statoliths and protoconchs can meaningfully record variation in seawater physical and chemical properties, and, hence, have potential as natural tags of natal origin. Copyright
PLOS ONE | 2012
Ofer Ben-Tzvi; Avigdor Abelson; Steven D. Gaines; Giacomo Bernardi; Ricardo Beldade; Michael S. Sheehy; Georges Paradis; Moshe Kiflawi
As with many marine species, the vast majority of coral-reef fishes have a bipartite life cycle consisting of a dispersive larval stage and a benthic adult stage. While the potentially far-reaching demographic and ecological consequences of marine dispersal are widely appreciated, little is known of the structure of the larval pool and of the dispersive process itself. Utilizing Palindrome Sequence Analysis of otolith micro-chemistry (PaSA;) we show that larvae of Neopomacentrus miryae (Pomacentridae) appear to remain in cohesive cohorts throughout their entire pelagic larval duration (PLD; ∼28 days). Genetically, we found cohort members to be maternally (mtDNA) unrelated. While physical forcing cannot be negated as contributing to initial cohort formation, the small scale of the observed spatial structure suggests that some behavioral modification may be involved from a very early age. This study contributes to our ongoing re-evaluation of the processes that structure marine populations and communities and the spatial scales at which they operate.
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2005
Benjamin I. Ruttenberg; Scott L. Hamilton; Michael J. H. Hickford; Georges Paradis; Michael S. Sheehy; Julie D. Standish; Ofer Ben-Tzvi; Robert R. Warner
Limnology and Oceanography | 2005
Robert R. Warner; Stephen E. Swearer; Jennifer E. Caselle; Michael S. Sheehy; Georges Paradis
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2003
Danielle C. Zacherl; Patricio H. Manríquez; Georges Paradis; Robert W. Day; Juan Carlos Castilla; Robert R. Warner; David W. Lea; Steven D. Gaines
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2005
David W. Lea; Dorothy K. Pak; Georges Paradis
Limnology and Oceanography-methods | 2007
Ofer Ben-Tzvi; Avigdor Abelson; Steven D. Gaines; Michael S. Sheehy; Georges Paradis; Moshe Kiflawi
Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2008
Ofer Ben-Tzvi; Moshe Kiflawi; Steve Gaines; M. Al-Zibdah; Michael S. Sheehy; Georges Paradis; Avigdor Abelson