Data Release

The Relative Composition of Late Pleistocene Coral Reefs in the Florida Keys

By Lauren T. Toth,1 Anastasios Stathakopoulos,1 Scarlette Hsia,2 and David Weinstein,3,4

1 U.S. Geological Survey, Saint Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center, St. Petersburg, FL
2 U.S. Geological Survey, Florence Bascom Geoscience Center, Reston, VA
3 The Meridian Group, Alexandria, VA
4 Ocean Rescue Alliance International, Apollo Beach, FL

Summary

The U.S. Geological Survey St. Petersburg Coastal and Marine Science Center’s (USGS SPCMSC) Core Archive in St. Petersburg, FL contains a collection of coral-reef cores collected from throughout the Florida Keys reef tract (FKRT; Fig. 1). In a previous study (Toth and Stathakopoulos, 2019), USGS researchers analyzed the upper, Holocene (~11,700 years ago to present) sections of those cores to evaluate how the coral composition of the FKRT changed over millennial timescales. Using the same methods, USGS researchers quantified the relative composition of late Pleistocene (~116 to 74 thousand years before present; Marine Isotope Stages [MIS] 5d, 5c, 5b, and 5a) sections of the coral reef cores dated by Hsia and others (2024). This data release provides metadata about the location of the cores and summarizes the relative composition of coral taxa and other carbonates and the water depths (relative to modern mean sea level) of the analyzed core intervals. The data release also provides a summary of previously unpublished data (collected by David Weinstein) on the relative composition of an older Late Pleistocene reef (growing ~130 to 116 thousand years before present; MIS5e) from the subaerially exposed fossil reef at Windley Key Fossil Reef Geological Park (Fig. 1). These data are compared with Holocene and modern coral-reef assemblages on the FKRT in Toth and others (2025).

Hsia, S., Toth, L.T., Mortlock, R.A., Stathakopoulos, A., and Kerans, C., 2024, U-series ages and elevation data of Late Pleistocene corals from the Florida Keys: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9EJBYKZ.

Toth, L.T., and Stathakopoulos, A., 2019, The absolute and relative composition of Holocene reef cores from the Florida Keys Reef Tract. U.S.: Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P93XXXA0.

Toth, L.T., Stathakopoulos, A., Hsia, S., and Weinstein, D., 2025, Shifting baselines of coral-reef species composition from the Late Pleistocene to the present in the Florida Keys: The Depositional Record (Shinn Special Issue), https://doi.org/10.1002/dep2.70009.

Data

File Name and Description Metadata (XML format) Metadata (text format) Download File
Late_Pleistocene_coral_reef_
relative_composition.zip

The percent composition of corals and other carbonates Marine Isotope Stage 5 reefs in the Florida Keys and accompanying data dictionary (.csv, .xlsx, .docx)
Late_Pleistocene_coral_reef_
relative_composition_metadata.xml
Late_Pleistocene_coral_reef_
relative_composition_metadata.txt
Late_Pleistocene_coral_reef_
relative_composition.zip

(54 KB)

Labeled graphic map showing data collection sites in the Florida Keys.
Figure 1. Locations of reefs where coral-reef cores (white points) and subaerial surveys (black point) analyzed in this study were collected. Divisions between subregions of the Florida Keys (black italic labels) are marked by gray lines.

Suggested Citation

Toth, L.T., Stathakopoulos, A., Hsia, S., and Weinstein, D., 2025, The relative composition of Late Pleistocene coral reefs in the Florida Keys: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P13IZY8R.