Foraminifera taxon details

Hemigordiellina Marie, 1961 †

767364  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:767364)

accepted
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marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
fossil only
feminine
Deleau, P.; Marie, P. (1961). Les Fusulinidés du Westphalien C du Bassin d'Abadla et quelques autres foraminifères du Carbonifère algérien (Région de Colomb-Bechar), Travaux des Collaborateurs. <em>Publications du Service de Ia Carte Géologique de l'Algérie, Bull., n. ser.</em> 25: 43-160.
page(s): p. 76 [details]  Available for editors  PDF available [request] 
Taxonomy Genus HEMIGORDIELLINA Marie in Deleau and Marie, 1961
emend. Vachard in Vachard and Beckary, 1991
Type Species....  
Taxonomy Genus HEMIGORDIELLINA Marie in Deleau and Marie, 1961
emend. Vachard in Vachard and Beckary, 1991
Type Species. Glomospira diversa Cushman and Waters, 1930; by original designation.
Synonyms. Glomospira (in the senses of the Russian authors, from Lipina, 1949 to Filimonova, 2010); Pseudoglomospira (of the USA and Japan authors; from Groves (1983) to Kobayashi, 2006; even if the same taxon is called Glomospira in Kobayashi, 2006).
Remarks. Small glomospiroid porcelaneous tests are here assigned to Hemigordiellina, because “Glomospira” is truly agglutinated and Pseudoglomospira of the authors is microgranular. Many micropaleontologists do not admit this interpretation, and therefore, a new name might be introduced in the nomenclature. We consider that, among the Cornuspiridae, the most primitive genus, Hemigordiellina, give rise to two lineages; either Midiella Pronina, 1988 (which do not attain the planispiral terminal stage) or Hemigordius (the terminal stage of which is planispiral). On the other hand, Midiella differs from Neodiscus by the smaller size and microstructure of the test (see below the analysis of family Neodiscidae), from Hemigordius by the inflated test due to oscillating-sigmoidal coiling, and from Septigordius Gaillot and Vachard, 2007 by the absence of pseudosepta.
Occurrence. Pennsylvanian–Permian; cosmopolitan.

Vachard (2019) pers. com. [details]
Hayward, B.W.; Le Coze, F.; Vachard, D.; Gross, O. (2024). World Foraminifera Database. Hemigordiellina Marie, 1961 †. Accessed at: https://marinespecies.org/foraminifera/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=767364 on 2024-03-28
Date
action
by
2014-07-20 04:05:00Z
created
2018-09-29 10:58:23Z
changed
2019-05-19 14:03:05Z
changed
2024-03-12 18:51:20Z
changed

original description Deleau, P.; Marie, P. (1961). Les Fusulinidés du Westphalien C du Bassin d'Abadla et quelques autres foraminifères du Carbonifère algérien (Région de Colomb-Bechar), Travaux des Collaborateurs. <em>Publications du Service de Ia Carte Géologique de l'Algérie, Bull., n. ser.</em> 25: 43-160.
page(s): p. 76 [details]  Available for editors  PDF available [request] 
From editor or global species database
Synonymy Hemigordiellina (porcelaneous) was a subjective junior synonym of Ammovertellina Suleymanov, 1959 (arenaceous) in the opinion of Loeblich and Tappan (1987). Both genera are rather homeomorphs: Vachard (2019) pers. com. (see also taxonomic note). [details]

Taxonomy Genus HEMIGORDIELLINA Marie in Deleau and Marie, 1961
emend. Vachard in Vachard and Beckary, 1991
Type Species. Glomospira diversa Cushman and Waters, 1930; by original designation.
Synonyms. Glomospira (in the senses of the Russian authors, from Lipina, 1949 to Filimonova, 2010); Pseudoglomospira (of the USA and Japan authors; from Groves (1983) to Kobayashi, 2006; even if the same taxon is called Glomospira in Kobayashi, 2006).
Remarks. Small glomospiroid porcelaneous tests are here assigned to Hemigordiellina, because “Glomospira” is truly agglutinated and Pseudoglomospira of the authors is microgranular. Many micropaleontologists do not admit this interpretation, and therefore, a new name might be introduced in the nomenclature. We consider that, among the Cornuspiridae, the most primitive genus, Hemigordiellina, give rise to two lineages; either Midiella Pronina, 1988 (which do not attain the planispiral terminal stage) or Hemigordius (the terminal stage of which is planispiral). On the other hand, Midiella differs from Neodiscus by the smaller size and microstructure of the test (see below the analysis of family Neodiscidae), from Hemigordius by the inflated test due to oscillating-sigmoidal coiling, and from Septigordius Gaillot and Vachard, 2007 by the absence of pseudosepta.
Occurrence. Pennsylvanian–Permian; cosmopolitan.

Vachard (2019) pers. com. [details]