Late Neogene Lophophaenidae (Nassellaria, Radiolaria) from the eastern equatorial Pacific
Author
Trubovitz, Sarah
Author
Renaudie, Johan
Author
Lazarus, David
Author
Noble, Paula
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-07-04
5160
1
1
158
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5160.1.1
journal article
286001
10.11646/zootaxa.5160.1.1
4088bcf7-dfad-49c7-886c-b745e1d2cdfb
11755334
10544058
A9179C79-EE43-44E4-8723-919505500049
Lophophaena hispida
(
Ehrenberg, 1862
)
Petrushevskaya, 1971
Plate 22,
Figs. 5–8B
.
Dictyocephalus hispidus
n. sp.
,
Ehrenberg, 1862
, p. 298
[not figured].
Dictyocephalus hispidus
Ehrenberg, Ehrenberg, 1873b
, pl. 5, fig. 18.
Dictyocephalus (Dictyocryphalus) hispidus
Ehrenberg,
Haeckel, 1887
, p. 1309
[not figured].
?
Theocapsa democriti
n. sp.
,
Haeckel, 1887
, p. 1427
, pl. 66, fig. 8.
Sethoconus crinitus
n. sp.
,
Cleve, 1900
, p. 11
, pl. 3, fig. 13.
Acanthocorys variabilis
n. sp.
Popofsky, 1913
, p. 360
–364, text-figs. 74–77,?73; non text-figs. 71–72, 78–81.
Lophophaena hispida
(Ehrenberg)
,
Petrushevskaya, 1971
, p. 115
, 117, pl. 61, figs. 1–3.
?
Lophophaena hispida
Ehrenberg
, atyp.,
Petrushevskaya, 1971
, pl. 57, fig. 4.
Theocapsa democriti
Haeckel,
Tan and Tchang, 1976
, fig. 69a–c.
Lophophaena cylindrica
Cleve,
Renz, 1976
, pl. 6, fig. 21.
Lophophaena hispida
Ehrenberg,
Kruglikova, 1978
, pl. 22, fig. 7.
Lophophaena hispida
Ehrenberg,
Nishimura and Yamauchi, 1984
, pl. 32, figs. 6–7.
Lophophaena hispida
Ehrenberg,
Boltovskoy and Jankilevich, 1985
, pl. 4, fig. 6.
Lophophaena hispida
Ehrenberg,
Nishimura, 1990
, p. 93
–95, figs. 17.1a–17.3b.
Lophophaena cylindrica
Cleve,
Takahashi, 1991
, pl. 25, figs. 4–5 (non fig. 3).
Lophophaena hispida
Ehrenberg
forma
hispida
,
Van de Paverd, 1995
, pl. 65, figs. 1–2.
Lophophaena hispida
Ehrenberg,
Itaki
et al.,
2010
, pl. 6, figs. 11–12.
Lophophaena hispida
Ehrenberg,
Matsuzaki
et al.,
2016
, figs. 9.17–9.18.
Lophophaena hispida
Ehrenberg, Matsuoka 2017
, fig. 22.1–22.8.
Lophophaena hispida
Ehrenberg,
Trubovitz
et al.
, 2020
, supplementary data 7.
Remarks.
The basionym of this species is
Dictyocephalus hispidus
Ehrenberg, 1862
. The species was emended and transferred to the genus
Lophophaena
by
Petrushevskaya (1971)
. Since then, the species has occasionally been confused with
Lophophaena cylindrica
(Cleve)
Petrushevskaya,
1971
in the literature. Beyond the difference in pore sizes on the cephalis and thorax,
L. hispida
differs from
L. cylindrica
(Pl. 22,
Figs. 1A
–
4
) in that cephalic spines are directly related to the nodes of the pores.
Van de Paverd (1995)
split
Lophophaena hispida
into two forms,
L. hispida hispida
and
L. hispida cylindrica
, which are largely consistent with the species designations
Lophophaena hispida
and
Lophophaena cylindrica
. Here we maintain that these are two separate species, following the usage most common in the literature, and it is our opinion that the differences between the two justify separate species.
Popofsky (1913)
illustrated a wide variety of forms within
Acanthocorys variabilis
, which we herein divide into four species, including
L. hispida
,
as well as
L. buetschlii
,
L. leshii
n. sp.
, and
L. variabilis
,
partially following the designations of previous authors as well as one new species. The specimens of
L. hispida
in our material varied considerably in their degree of silicification. Some specimens exhibited a closed base of the thorax. Haeckel designated specimens with the enclosed base and more elongated cephalis as a separate species,
Theocapsa democriti
Haeckel 1887
. We observed a few
L. hispida
specimens with semi-enclosed and fully-enclosed thorax bases, suggesting this may be an ontogenetic character. However, the specimen
Haeckel (1887)
figured as
Theocapsa democriti
also appears to have a more elongated, thumb-shaped cephalis than is typical for
L. hispida
, so these may indeed be separate species.
Range.
Late Pliocene—Recent, EEP (
Table 1
).