L. Deverteuil et G. Norris, MIDDLE TO UPPER MIOCENE GEONETTIA-CLINEAE, AN OPPORTUNISTIC COASTAL EMBAYMENT DINOFLAGELLATE OF THE HOMOTRYBLIUM COMPLEX, Micropaleontology, 42(3), 1996, pp. 263-284
Analysis of upper Miocene open bay fine sandy marls from the Windmill
Point beds in Maryland yielded moderately diverse dinocyst assemblages
dominated by a single quinqueform species. The new species, Geonettia
clineae gen. et sp. nov., is characterized by a resting cyst having f
ields that all routinely dissociate, revealing a tabulation most simil
ar to fossil Eocladopyxis peniculata Morgenroth 1966 and living Pyrodi
nium bahamense Plate 1906. Sufficient differences exist in the Ventral
epitabulation, style of excystment and the wall structure, to warrant
separation at the generic level. Geonettia clineae has a known strati
graphic range from upper middle Miocene through upper upper Miocene in
the western north Atlantic. Facies analysis and abundance patterns in
dicate that Geonettia clineae thrived in mesotrophic open embayments h
aving low sediment influx. Species of Eocladopyxis Morgenroth 1966, Ge
onettia gen. nov., Homotryblium Davey and Williams 1966 and Pyrodinium
Plate 1906, often occur as dominants in moderate to low diversity din
ocyst assemblages, typically in unstable coastal environments. This tr
end suggests an opportunistic, bloom-forming, r-selected ecology for t
hese pyrodinioid genera.