- References
Bioclaustration is kind of interaction when one organism (usually soft bodied) is embedded in a living substrate (i.e. skeleton of another organism); it means “biologically walled -up”. In case of symbiosis the walling-up is not complete and both organisms stay alive (Palmer and Wilson, 1988). References- {{cite journal|last1= Palmer|first1= T.J.|last2= Wilson|first2= M.A.|year= 1988|title= Parasitism of Ordovician bryozoans and the origin of pseudoborings|journal= Palaeontology|volume= 31|pages= 939–949|url= http://www.bryozoa.net/library/1988/palmer_wilson_1988.pdf|deadurl= yes|archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20150120013037/http://www.bryozoa.net/library/1988/palmer_wilson_1988.pdf|archivedate= 2015-01-20|df= }}
- {{cite journal|last1=Cónsole-Gonella|first1= C. |last2=Marquillas|first2= R.A.|year= 2014|title= Bioclaustration trace fossils in epeiric shallow marine stromatolites: the Cretaceous-Palaeogene Yacoraite Formation, Northwestern Argentina|journal= Lethaia|volume= 47|pages= 107–119|doi=10.1111/let.12043}}
{{ecology-stub}} 4 : Ecology|Ecology terminology|Symbiosis|Trace fossils |