Dinocyst distribution is mainly studied through studies of surface sediments. Many studies are regional, such as the Iberian Margin the North Sea, Kiel bight, Celtic Sea, Norwegian Sea, around Iceland, the Southeast Pacific, the Arctic, Equatorial Atlantic, South and Equatorial Atlantic, off West Africa, the Southern Ocean, Benguela upwelling, in the Mediterranean Sea, Caspian Sea, British Columbia, The Northeastern Pacific, Florida, Mexico and Barends Sea. Such surface sediment studies show that dinoflagellate cyst distribution is controlled by ranges of temperature, salinity and nutrients. This often poses biogeographical boundaries, more particularly temperature. Some species can be clearly related to cold waters. Recent molecular work has shown the presence of such cold-water indicator, a life-stage of
Islandinium sp. in Canadian sea-ice for the first time. Other species are thermophilic, such as the "living fossil"
Dapsilidinium pastielsii currently found in the Indo-Pacific Warm Pool only.
Eutrophication can also be reflected in dinocyst assemblages. Cysts can be transported via ocean-currents, which can distort ecological signals. This has been documented for the warm water species
Operculodinium israelianum and
Polysphaeridium zoharyi which were interpreted to have been transported along the Southern coast of the United States. Seasonality and fluxes are studied through
sediment trap studies, which help to understand ecological signals. == Palaeoecology of organic-walled dinocysts ==