Benthic Foraminifera from the Capricorn Group, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Author
Mamo, Briony L.
text
Zootaxa
2016
4215
1
1
123
journal article
37169
10.11646/zootaxa.4215.1.1
0087fa4c-a4f0-45d9-a2de-d433d7885753
1175-5326
272923
B91D1782-C11A-4CDC-96B6-76104FEE51BD
Rotorbis
Sellier de Civrieux 1977
Rotorbis
sp. cf.
R
.
auberii
(
d'Orbigny 1839
)
(
Fig. 19
:14–16)
Description.
Test trochospiral, planoconvex to biconvex, with crescentic shaped chambers on spiral side and curved subtriangular chambers on umbilical side. Test outline sub-circular with pinched, keeled, peripheral margin. Keel flattened with rounded edge, varying slightly in size. Coarse, unevenly spaced perforations on chambers of spiral and umbilical sides. Perforations tend to be more numerous and closely packed on umbilical side, but are absent adjacent to umbilicus and posterior part of chamber. Perforations on spiral side tend to trace sutures. Sutures flush or weakly depressed on spiral side. Sutures on umbilical side deep, strongly curved, radiating, increasing in length with each chamber and lined with fine, papillate ornament.
Remarks.
All of the available specimens are damaged making an accurate identification difficult. However, the distinct arrangement of the umbilical sutures, test chamber shape and arrangement indicate a close comparison with
R
.
auberii
(
Fig. 19
:14–16).
Specimens of
R
.
auberii
described by
Loeblich & Tappan (1994)
are similar to those collected from the CG especially in test shape and chamber arrangement, but lack any kind of keel. The perforate ornament on the spiral side is clustered around the peripheral areas of the test. Some perforations are scattered along the sutures, but the central test area is largely imperforate. On the umbilical side, the perforations are far fewer and cluster more exclusively around the posterior test area with papillae lining the deep umbilical sutures (
Loeblich & Tappan 1994
). Specimens tentatively assigned to
R
.
auberii
by
Parker (2009)
and
Debenay (2012)
closely resemble
Rotorbis
sp. cf.
R. auberii
from the CG. All taxa possess a slight keel and the perforate ornament is similarly arranged on both test sides. It is likely that the CG specimens are conspecific with those illustrated by
Parker (2009
, fig. 513a–h) and
Debenay (2012, pg. 212)
despite their damaged condition.
Parker (2009)
noted discrepancies in the perforate arrangement and the structure of the folium when compared to the
type
specimen of
R
.
auberii
.
The original specimens of
R
.
auberii
described by
d’Orbigny (1839)
were collected from
Cuba
and Loeblich & Tappan’s (1994) specimens of
R
.
auberii
came from a depth of
44 m
from the southeast Timor Sea and at
24 m
depth from north of
Bathurst
and
Melville Islands
,
eastern Timor Sea
.
Haig (1997)
mentioned specimens amongst his collections from the Exmouth Gulf of
Western Australia
, but the specimens were not illustrated. Parker’s (2009) specimens were collected from Ningaloo Reef
,
Western Australia
and Debenay’s (2012) from the southwestern lagoon of
New Caledonia
from depths less than
40 m
.
Distribution within study area.
Rotorbis
sp. cf.
R. auberii
was most abundant in Wistari and One Tree Reefs with an average abundance of four to five specimens per site, with the maximum at site
34 in
One Tree Lagoon with twelve specimens collected. This taxon was rarely collected from Heron Reef and was absent from Sykes Reef and the channel sample. Several specimens of
R
.
auberii
were live at the time of collection from One Tree Reef and Heron Reef flat, but never more than one live specimen per site.