SUBSTRATE CONDITIONS AND SETTLING STRATEGY OF GOGIID EOCRINOIDS (ECHINODERMATA) FROM THE KAILI BIOTA (MIDDLE CAMBRIAN), GUIZHOU PROVINCE, SOUTH CHINA
In Kaili, eocrinoids occur in three microfacies: 1) softground and/or firmground with fine-grained (silty and/or muddy) substrate and a few organophosphatic brachiopods; 2) firmground with abundant organic/algal debris, a few skeletal grains, and trace fossils; 3) pseudo-hardground with concentrated skeletal fragments, which were dominated by either organophosphatic brachiopods, trilobites, or a mixture of both.
In order to test whether eocrinoids had a preference for particular substrates, the relative abundance of skeletal coverage types was determined. 11 eocrinoid-bearing slabs were point counted. Among them, skeletal coverage varied from slightly more than 7% in the softground and/or firmground microfacies up to 64% in the pseudo-hardground microfacies.
Among 123 articulated specimens examined, 73% of eocrinoids are preserved definitely attaching to skeletal substrates. Types of skeletal substrates for eocrinoid holdfasts are organophosphatic brachiopods; large trilobite fragments, such as cranidium, free cheek, thoracic segment, and pygidium; and mollusks, such as hyoliths and Scenella. The high frequency of Gogia globosa attaching to inarticulate brachiopods is due to the high richness of organophosphatic brachiopods rather than a host-specific association in Kaili Biota. However, the preference of not attaching to small trilobites, such as Pagetia sp., requires further investigation.