PHORTICIOIDEA Haeckel, 1882

Suzuki, Noritoshi, Caulet, Jean-Pierre & Dumitrica, Paulian, 2021, A new integrated morpho- and molecular systematic classification of Cenozoic radiolarians (Class Polycystinea) - suprageneric taxonomy and logical nomenclatorial acts, Geodiversitas 43 (15), pp. 405-573 : 447

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/geodiversitas2021v43a15

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DC259A19-9B35-4B33-AD9F-44F4E1DA9983

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038DDA73-FFB8-FE18-066F-FD47FEC04EDC

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scientific name

PHORTICIOIDEA Haeckel, 1882
status

 

Superfamily PHORTICIOIDEA Haeckel, 1882 n. stat.

Phorticida Haeckel, 1882: 464 [as a subfamily]; 1887: 604, 708 [as a family].

Larnacillilae – De Wever et al. 2001: 153 [as a subsuperfamily].

Larnacillioidea [sic] – Afanasieva et al. 2005: S287 (= Larnacilloidea). — Afanasieva & Amon 2006: 129.

DIAGNOSIS. — Spumellarians with a heteropolar and ring-shaped (or ringed-ribbon shaped). Microsphere having two pairs of opposite gates growing in younger, or all stages, by formation of systems of three successively larges elliptical latticed girdles, which are disposed in three mutually perpendicular planes.

REMARKS

The superfamily name “Larnacillilae” is herein replaced by Phorticioidea .The type genus of the former is a nomen dubium as the type species is unillustrated. The Phorticioidea consist of the Amphitholidae (Clade M1), Circodiscidae , Cryptolarnaciidae (Clade M2), Histiastridae and Phorticiidae .The Phorticioidea genera with girdles (e.g., Phorticium, Qiuripylolena, Sphaerolarnacillium ) are differentiated from the Larcospiroidea genera with girdles (e.g., Pylospira, Tholospira, Sphaeropylolena , Pylozonium , Tetrapyle ). Identifying Phorticioidea members is quite difficult as they appear to change appearance in different orientations, even when observing the same specimen ( Tan & Chen 1990: pls 1, 2; Itaki 2009: pl. 10, figs 1-5, 10, 12, 13; Ogane & Suzuki 2009 : figs 2-4; et al. 2013: figs 3, 4). By using three-dimension resin models, the different orientations at different growth stages were illustrated by Zhang & Suzuki (2017: 8, fig. 3). To understand the organization of the skeleton is essential to gather: the absolute and relative geometrical cartesian coordinates, their mathematical expression, and the difference between anatomical recognition and visual perception under light microscopy ( Zhang & Suzuki 2017: 5 -8, 9-13). A failure to understand these points will surely lead to a series of fruitless debates. Phorticioidea are only distinguishable from Larcospiroidea in the absence of an S1a-girdle in the sense of Zhang & Suzuki (2017) . The appearance of the triangle itself has no value in determining taxonomy. Instead of an S1a-girdle, a G1a girdle is directly attached to the microsphere (S1a) (see fig. 5.5 in Zhang & Suzuki 2017 ). This structure can be observed in several cases under a light microscope with the Plan or S-Plan level objec- tive lens, and with a correction ring to adjust the optical spherical abbreviation ( Zhang & Suzuki 2017: 4 ). The view from the overlapped orientation of the microsphere (S1a) and S1a-girdle in the Phorticioidea resembles the central part of Larcospiroidea (compare figs 5.2 with fig. 5.5 in Zhang & Suzuki 2017 ). In this view, the central part appears spherical in Phorticioidea .

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