Dinoflagellate contributions to the deep sea
Dinoflagellate contributions to the deep sea
Date
1992
Authors
Dale, Barrie
Dale, Amy L.
Dale, Amy L.
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DOI
10.1575/1912/410
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Abstract
For the first time, sediment trap samples from several depths in the deep sea were analyzed
to estimate both the types and amounts of mineral contributed by dinoflagellates to the
deep sea sediment flux. Thecal remains of dinoflagellate motile stages were almost entirely
restricted to the upper few hundred meters of the water column, supporting the generally
accepted explanation of their absence in the fossil record (i.e., theca are composed of cellulosic
material which is destroyed before they may be incorporated into bottom sediments). The
main contribution to the sediment flux is composed of resting cysts routinely produced in
the life cycles of just a few of the more obscure oceanic dinoflagellates, probably species of
Scrippsiella or Ensiculifera. The cyst assemblage sedimenting out from plankton at present is
overwhelmingly dominated by a few small calcareous types (up to several thousands/m2/day).
If not dissolved, these may accumulate in paleontologically significant amounts in bottom
sediments to give the most representative fossil record of oceanic dinoflagellates. "Oceanic
assemblages" of organic-walled cysts from Recent deep-sea sediments previously described
by palynologists probably represent long distance transport from more coastal regions rather
than oceanic dinoflagellate production.