Litcius/Paper detail

Calcareous dinoflagellate blooms during the Late Cretaceous ‘greenhouse’ world—a case study from western Ukraine

Agnieszka Ciurej, Zofia Dubicka, Andriy Poberezhskyy

2023PeerJ13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

resulting in increased temperatures across the globe-a 'Greenhouse World'. During this period, calcareous dinoflagellate cysts (c-dinocysts) flourished and became a ubiquitous constituent of calcifying plankton around the world. An acme in calcareous dinocysts during the Albian to the Turonian coincided with the highest recorded seawater surface temperatures and was possibly linked to conditions that favored calcification and a highly oligotrophic system in European shelf seas. This study examines the potential applicability of c-dinocysts as a proxy for paleoenvironmental conditions based on their assemblage changes plotted against foraminiferal occurrences and microfacies analysis. The material was extracted from the upper Turonian chalk of the Dubivtsi region in western Ukraine. An inverse correlation was observed between species diversity and the number of c-dinocyst specimens. Nutrient availability gradients apparently determined important changes in the calcareous dinocysts distribution. These trophic changes were likely caused by the interplay of eustatic sea-level fluctuations and Subhercynian tectonic activity leading to changeable nutrient inputs from the nearby land.

Topics & Concepts

DinocystDinoflagellateCretaceousGeologyOceanographyCalcareousPalynologyPaleontologyEcologyBiologyPollenPaleontology and Stratigraphy of FossilsMarine and environmental studiesGeology and Paleoclimatology Research