Abstract

The Middle–Late Permian reefs were formed in two paleogeographic realms: North Pangaea and Tethyan Realm. The basic reef builders in the first realm were representatives of Calcispongiae and Bryozoa; in the second realm, sphinctozoans, corals, and stromatoporoids. In these realms, various algae and cyanobacteria communities were of importance. Reef construction in the first realm associated with arid climatic conditions, isolation of water basins, and accumulation of salt-bearing sequences came to the end in the early Late Permian. Reef construction in the Tethyan Realm occurred in the Late Permian up to the Permian–Triassic boundary. The termination of reef construction was due to features of the reef ecosystem, which turned out to be unstable against the background of variations in the conditions and mass extinction at the Permian–Triassic boundary and dissociated before the termination of this extinction.

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