“…Paleoproductivity refers to the total amount of organic matter fixed per unit area per unit time (Algeo et al, 2011;Pan et al, 2020). Generally speaking, high organic productivity is one of the key factors for the formation of hydrocarbon source rocks (Talbot, 1988;Nelson et al, 1995;Mansour et al, 2020a;Mansour et al, 2020b;Yang et al, 2016;Zhao et al, 2021), and a large number of studies have shown that siliceous plankton in marine source rocks is the main provider of marine primary productivity (De Wever and Baudin, 1996;Chou et al, 2012;Xiang et al, 2013;Shaldybin et al, 2017;Jiang et al, 2019;Zhang et al, 2019), whose content is closely related to the biological reproduction in surface water, and its temporal and spatial distribution can be used to reflect the changing process of paleoproductivity. In recent years, many studies have shown that radiolarians enriched in marine hydrocarbon source rocks can gather together and absorb a lot of symbiotic algae in their bodies by using a large number of pseudopodia, forming a good symbiotic relationship with them (Lyle et al, 1988;Erbacher and Thurow, 1997;Xiang et al, 2013;Khan et al, 2019).…”