Melonis affinis ( Reuss, 1851 )

Bergh, Eugene W. & Compton, John S., 2022, Taxonomy of Middle Miocene foraminifera from the northern Namibian continental shelf, Zootaxa 5091 (1), pp. 1-55 : 28-29

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5091.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:ABC8AF70-F691-4D07-8F20-70934642C8BC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5840563

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/197787BA-FFC8-9332-7FC9-9D07FC04FD21

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Melonis affinis ( Reuss, 1851 )
status

 

Melonis affinis ( Reuss, 1851) View in CoL

Pl. 6, fig. 5

Nonionina affinis Reuss, 1851, p. 72 , pl. 5, fig. 32.

Noniona barleeana Williamson, 1858, p. 32, pl. 3, figs. 68–69.

Nonionina crassula Parker & Jones, 1857, p. 14 , pl. 11, figs. 5–7.

Nonion barleeanum Cushman, 1930, p. 11 , pl. 4, fig. 5.

Melonis barleeanum Loeblich & Tappan, 1988 View in CoL , pl. 696, figs. 5–6; Hermelin, 1989, p. 88, pl. 17, fig. 12; Milker & Schmiedl, 2012, p. 115, fig. 26.11–26.12; Holbourn et al., 2013, p. 354.

Melonis barleeanus Loeblich & Tappan, 1994, p. 159 View in CoL , pl. 347, figs. 1–5.

Melonis affinis Milker et al., 2009, p. 218 View in CoL , pl. 3, fig. 20; Milker and Schmiedl, 2012, p. 115, fig. 26.9–10.

Description: The test wall is calcareous and perforate. The test is planispiral and symmetrical in side view. The periphery of the test is rounded. Up to twelve chambers in the final whorl are separated by smooth, slightly curved sutures. The chamber walls are coarsely perforate and the sutures very finely perforate. The sutures radiate from the umbilical region, becoming thinner toward the test margin. The chambers gradually increase in size toward the apertural end. The aperture is an interio-marginal slit.

Remarks: The relative abundances of Melonis affinis decrease toward the deeper cores, forming minor (<10%) to trace (<1%) components in the samples of all three cores. The tests are moderate in size, measuring up to 0.5 mm in diameter.

Life strategy: This species lives unattached in mostly infaunal and muddy substrates ( Murray, 1991). M. affinis is most abundant in oxic conditions, but is also tolerant of dysoxic and suboxic conditions ( Kaiho, 1994; Murray, 2006). The species is also associated with the nitrate reduction zone ( Fontanier et al., 2002) on the shelf to slope ( Holbourn et al., 2013).

Global stratigraphic range: This species occurs from the Oligocene to Recent ( Holbourn et al., 2013).

Regional occurrence: Melonis affinis is recorded to occur in middle Miocene sediments on the outer continental shelf of Namibia, south of the Kunene River mouth (this study) and in moderate abundances during the late Miocene to Pliocene along the slope of northern Namibia to the southwestern slope of South Africa ( Wefer et al., 1998). Wefer et al. (1998) recorded the occurrence of M. affinis (= M. barleeanus ) only in low to moderate (<2 to <20%) abundances along the slope off the Walvis Ridge during the Pleistocene.

Kingdom

Chromista

Phylum

Foraminifera

Class

Globothalamea

Order

Rotaliida

Family

Melonidae

Genus

Melonis

Loc

Melonis affinis ( Reuss, 1851 )

Bergh, Eugene W. & Compton, John S. 2022
2022
Loc

Melonis affinis

Milker, Y. & Schmiedl, G. 2012: 115
Milker, Y. & Schmiedl, G. & Betzler, C. & Romer, M. & Jaramillo-Vogel, D. & Siccha, M. 2009: 218
2009
Loc

Melonis barleeanus

Loeblich, A. R. & Tappan, H. 1994: 159
1994
Loc

Melonis barleeanum

Holbourn, A. & Henderson, A. S. & MacLeod, N. 2013: 354
Milker, Y. & Schmiedl, G. 2012: 115
Hermelin, J. O. R. 1989: 88
1989
Loc

Nonionina crassula

Parker, W. K. & Jones, T. R. 1857: 14
1857
Loc

Nonionina affinis

Reuss, A. E. 1851: 72
1851
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