Abstract

The Paleozoic Era was an interval of profound changes in metazoan reef ecosystems, which became magnificent in scale and diversity, owing to the evolution of various skeletal reef builders especially corals and sponges. This special issue comprises 16 papers that improve our understanding on the complex evolution and paleoecology of corals and metazoan reef ecosystems, and their response to environmental changes through the Cambrian to Permian. The case studies present detailed evidence that helps to reconstruct the complicated interactions among reef organisms, the succession of metazoan reefs, and their relations to paleoenvironments. Some key findings address (i) Cambrian reefs and microbe–metazoan reef transition to the Ordovician, (ii) reef component and paleoecological features of Siluro-Devonian coral-stromatoporoid reefs, and (iii) growth characteristics, paleogeography, and reef formation of Late Paleozoic corals and sponges. As such, this special issue will stimulate further work on reef studies and be of interest to a broad community of paleoecologists, to scholars in various fields of the geosciences as well as to reef biologists.

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