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Calcitic resting cysts in Peridinium trochoideum (Stein) Lemmermann, an autotrophic marine dinoflagellate
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1970
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BiologyUnicellular OrganismHarrington SoundEngineeringLiving FossilCalcitic Resting CystsNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPeridinium TrochoideumNumerous Calcareous CystsCalcareous CystBiological OceanographyOceanographyAutotrophic Marine DinoflagellateAlgal BiologySymbiosisMarine BiologyMarine Biota
Numerous calcareous cysts of the marine dinoflagellate Peridinium trochoideum (Stein) Lemmermann have been obtained from a fresh clonal culture that was isolated by incubation of a calcareous cyst from sediment in Harrington Sound, Bermuda. Electron diffraction analysis demonstrates that the crystalline spines of these cysts are composed of calcite. A few additional observations are made concerning the encystment-excystment behaviour, vegetative cell morphology, and biogeographic distribution of P. trochoideum. The phylogenetic relationships between this species and other living and fossil calcareous spore-producing dinoflagellates also are discussed briefly.