Benthic Foraminifera from the Capricorn Group, Great Barrier Reef, Australia
Author
Mamo, Briony L.
text
Zootaxa
2016
4215
1
1
123
journal article
http://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4215.1.1
0087fa4c-a4f0-45d9-a2de-d433d7885753
1175-5326
272923
B91D1782-C11A-4CDC-96B6-76104FEE51BD
Operculina
?
ammonoides
(
Schröter 1783
)
(
Fig. 25
:18–20)
1781
Nautilus ammonoides
Gronovius
, p. 282, pl. 19, figs 5, 6,
nomen nudum
.
1783
Nautilus ammonoides
Schröter
, p. 21.
?1884
Operculina ammonoides
(Gronovius)
; Brady, pl. 112, figs 3–8.
1993
Assilina ammonoides
(Gronovius)
; Hottinger
et al
., p. 154, pl. 222, figs 1–8; pl. 223, figs 1–14, pl. 224, figs 1–8; pl. 225, figs 1–9.
1994
Assilina ammonoides
(Gronovius)
; Loeblich & Tappan, p. 170, pl. 387, figs 7–9; pl. 388, figs 1–4.
1999
Operculina ammonoides
(Gronovius)
; Hohenegger
et al
., p. 153, fig. 28.
2002
Operculina ammonoides
(Gronovius)
; Yordanova & Hohenegger, p. 199, pl. 33, figs 11–14.
2009
Assilina ammonoides
(Schröter)
; Parker, p. 515, fig. 367a–j.
2012
Operculina ammonoides
(Gronovius)
; Debenay, p. 228, pl. 20.
Description.
See
Hohenegger
et al
. (1999
, p. 153, fig. 28);
Hottinger
et al
. (1993
, p. 154, pl. 222, figs 1–8; pl. 223, figs 1–14, pl. 224, figs 1–8; pl. 225, figs 1–9) and
Parker (2009
, p. 515, fig. 367a–j).
Remarks.
Operculina
?
ammonoides
(
Schröter 1783
)
is characterised by a lamellar, planispiral, flat, discoidal test with raised sutures and thin peripheral carina. The ornament consists of small pustules that often cluster around the initial chambers and around the coil of the test along the sutures with more scattered occurrences across the later chambers. The test is finely perforated, but the sutures, initial chambers and apertural face are imperforate. The aperture is absent except for a tubular space extending from a single opening of the spiral canal over the marginal carina to the opposite opening of the spiral canal (
Fig. 25
:18–20).
Ellis & Messina (1940)
in a 1998 supplement, stated that the taxonomic name established by
Gronovius (1781)
was rejected for nomenclature purposes by the
ICZN (2000)
and that
Schröter (1783)
therefore became the first published record of this species.
Substanial confusion surrounds the genus
Operculina
and this species in particular.
Operculina
?
ammonoides
has frequently been assigned to
Assilina
d’Orbigny 1826
(
Hottinger
et al.
1993
;
Loeblich & Tappan 1994
;
Parker 2009
), but the genus
Assilina
is generally considered to have became extinct during the middle Eocene (Hallock
et al.
1991;
BouDagher-Fadel 2008
). But detailed investigations of
Operculina
?
ammonoides
by
Hottinger
et al
. (1993)
established that this species does not have a folded septal flap nor trabeculae and is therefore more suited elsewhere. Further work is required to effectively establish the correct placement of this species.
Operculina
?
ammonoides
displays intraspecific variation in the degree of test inflation, some tests are more lenticular than completely flat in profile and also in the extent that the pustulose ornament covers the test. This variation is observable in the specimens collected by
Brady (1884)
from Coral Reef,
Australia
(British Natural History Museum reg. no. 1955: 10:2, 813–841) and the CG specimens. Coral Reef specimens show a range in test thickness and degree of chamber inflation to the extent that specimens loose their flat shape to become distinctly lenticular in profile. The CG specimens are almost completely flat in profile and the pustulose ornament does not usually extend beyond the initial coiled chambers (
Fig. 25
:18–20).
Brady (1884)
recorded this species from Amboyna and the
Admiralty Islands
in the Pacific from depths ranging from
27–46 m
and
Coral Reef
,
Australia
.
This
species has a global distribution (
Gulf
of Aqaba,
Red Sea
from photic zone to 60 m—Hottinger
et al
. 1993;
Timor Sea
at 87–146 m—Loeblich &
Tappan
1994
;
Sulawesi
,
Indonesia—Renema
&
Troelstra
2001
;
Sesoko Island
,
Japan
at 20–50 m—Hohenegger
et al
. 1999,
Yordanova
&
Hohenegger
2002
;
Exmouth Gulf—Haig
1997;
Ningaloo Reef
, Western Australia—Parker 2009;
New Caledonia—Debenay
2012).
Distribution within study area.
Forty of the
46 specimens
of
O.?
ammonoides
collected from the CG came from the relatively deep channel sample between Wistari and Heron Reefs.
No
more than two specimens per sample were collected from the rest of the sampled reefs. This distribution closely matches other published examples (
Brady 1884
;
Hohenegger
et al.
1999
;
Yordanova & Hohenegger 2002
) with greatest abundance within the photic zone below
15 m
.