Polysaccammina hyperhalina

Camacho, S, Moura, D, Connor, S, Scott, DB & Boski, T, 2015, Taxonomy, ecology and biogeographical trends of dominant benthic foraminifera species from an Atlantic-Mediterranean estuary (the Guadiana, southeast Portugal), Palaeontologia Electronica 52 (4), pp. 1-37 : 17

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26879/512

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6C046402-FF90-FFF3-ECF5-FFA27E4306ED

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Polysaccammina hyperhalina
status

 

Polysaccammina hyperhalina View in CoL (Medioli, Scott and Petrucci, 1983 in Petrucci et al., 1983)

Figure 2.4-2.6 View FIGURE 2

1870 Lituola findens Parker, 1870 ; Dawson, p. 8, fig. 1.

1913 Reophax findens (Parker, 1870) ; Rhumbler, p. 466, fig. CLXXV.

1983 Polysaccammina hyperhalina Medioli, Scott and Petrucci ; Petrucci, Medioli, Scott, Pianetti and Cavazzini, p. 73, 74, pl. 1, 2.

1996 Reophax moniliformis Siddall, 1886 ; Redois and Debenay, p. 258, pl. 1, fig. 3.

2005 Polysaccammina hyperhalina Medioli, Scott and Petrucci ; Barbosa, Scott, Seoane and Turcq, p. 40, pl. 1, figs. 10, 11.

Morphological description. Test coarsely to fine agglutinated, usually uniserial but often irregular and sometimes branching ( Figure 2.5 View FIGURE 2 ); chambers of irregular shape, either regularly increasing in size or remaining of the same size throughout; test flexible due to an inner pseudochitinous lining which can be observed at broken chamber connections; aperture terminal, round and ivaginated to form a inner, backward pointing funnel ( Figure 2.6 View FIGURE 2 ).

Occurrence. Common and nearly constant agglutinated species; more common at the lower reaches of the estuary; in winter, its distribution seems restricted to the lower elevation zones, whilst in summer it reaches higher abundances at both the middle and lower elevations of the marshes.

Remarks. This species has a fragile test, easily broken during washing.

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