The species diversity and distribution of benthic dinoflagellates are illustrated from the back reef sand habitats at Carrie Bow Cay. Sand appears an ideal environment for nurturing a variety of species. Sand supported blooms of toxic, non-toxic, and parasitic assemblages of dinoflagellates. Morphology of dinoflagellates is illustrated in SEM and LM pictures; including the life cycle of a parasitic dinoflagellate's vegetative stage, sporogenetic stages, and the morphology of the feeding organelle. The feeding organelle of the primary dinoflagellate cysts is a hold fast and a peduncle-like infestation tube, a 'sucker organelle', that inserts itself into copepod eggs. The parasitic dinoflagellate continues feeding on crustacean eggs since it is the only food source during vegetative cell division within the cyst. This is the first observation of the presence of parasitic dinoflagellates in shallow coral reef water. The study attempts to provide new knowledge on dinoflagellate associations and morphology of sand-welling species in the microscopic food web of shallow warm tropical waters. Even, sand inhabiting invertebrates are not exempt from parasitic dinoflagellates.

Key words: biodiversity, coral reef, dinoflagellates, life cycle stage, sandwelling