Napora bondoca, Dumitrica & Zügel, 2003

Dumitrica, Paulian & Zügel, Peter, 2003, Lower Tithonian mono- and dicyrtid Nassellaria (Radiolaria) from the Solnhofen area (southern Germany), Geodiversitas 25 (1), pp. 5-72 : 58-60

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5372196

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8BF4D0FF-F247-4B92-B327-0D647B01C386

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/943E87C0-FFD3-FF89-FC93-6AA3FE90F6CC

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Napora bondoca
status

sp. nov.

Napora bondoca n. sp. ( Fig. 28F, G View FIG )

HOLOTYPE. — Photo No. 58905; stub Mue 22/21; Musée de Géologie , Lausanne, No. 74413 ( Fig. 28F View FIG ). ETYMOLOGY. — From the latinized Rumanian word bondoc: short and stout.

MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Four specimens from the type horizon (sample Mue 22).

DIMENSIONS ( IN µM). — Total length 145-175 (av. 170), length of apical horn 40-50 (av. 45), of cephalothorax 65-80 (av. 75), of feet 45-65 (av. 60), width of apical horn 20-30 (av. 25), of cephalis 39-47 (av. 42), of thorax 70-85 (av. 80).

DESCRIPTION

Test small, pyramidal, robust. Cephalis globular, imperforate with a very stout, short apical horn. Horn three-bladed with thick blades and deep, narrow groves in the proximal half, and pyramidal in the distal part. Ventral spine well developed outside, pyramidal with several blades. Thorax short pyramidal, thick-walled, with generally four transverse rows of polygonally framed, rounded pores. Feet usually as long as thorax, tapering distally, slightly divergent and curved. External ribs of feet prolonged from cephalis along thorax where they form the three edges of the pyramid. Velum not preserved in our specimens but its remains are visible on the proximal part of the lateral blades of feet.

REMARKS

This species differs from Napora boneti Pessagno, Whalen & Yeh, 1986 by having stouter apical horn and feet, external blade of feet much higher on the thorax, feet shorter. From Napora cruda Yang, 1993 it differs by the lack of subsidiary grooves on the proximal part of apical horn. All these three species are otherwise rather close morphologically.

Kingdom

Chromista

Phylum

Radiozoa

Class

Polycystina

Order

Nassellaria

Family

Ultranaporidae

Genus

Napora

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF