Abstract

Calcified coccoid fossils in the Permian–Triassic boundary microbialites were widely considered to represent the remains of the organisms that formed the microbialites. However, this role has been recently attributed to the fossil casts of Microcystis cyanobacterial colonies, leaving the ecological role of the coccoid fossils, as well as their affinities, uncertain. Here we propose that these coccoid fossils bear morphological similarity and are related to the extant epiphytic cyanobacterium Stanieria, and that they lived in surface waters by attaching themselves to bloom-forming phytoplankton, in a hitch-hiking lifestyle. Calcification of the envelopes of these interpreted Stanieria cells produced the small thin-walled spherical calcareous coccoid fossils. Different from ordinary pseudoplanktons, Stanieria cells cannot attach themselves to sparse planktons, but only to densely packed phytoplanktons in bloom. The dependence of these calcified Stanieria fossils on this lifestyle makes them possible indicators of ancient planktonic blooms.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call