Foraminifera taxon details
Pseudospira Reitlinger in Vdovenko et al., 1993 †
1056576 (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:1056576)
accepted
Genus
Glomospira mikhailovi Reitlinger, 1950 † accepted as Pseudospira mikhailovi (Reitlinger, 1950) † (type by original designation)
Pseudolituotuba (Pseudospira) Reitlinger in Vdovenko et al., 1993 † · unaccepted (Nomen translatum)
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
fossil only
feminine
(of Pseudolituotuba (Pseudospira) Reitlinger in Vdovenko et al., 1993 †) Vdovenko, M. V.; Rauzer-Chernousova, D. M.; Reitlinger, E. A.; Sabirov, A. A. (1993). Справочник по систематике мелких фораминифер палеозоя (за исключением эндотироидей и пермских многокамерных лагеноидей) - Reference-Book on the Systematics of Paleozoic Smaller Foraminifers (with the exception of endotyroids and Permian multi-chamber lagenoids). <em>Nauka.</em> 1-128., available online at https://books.google.com/books?id=IBRq8aK5H3UC
page(s): p. 62 [details] Available for editors
[request]
page(s): p. 62 [details] Available for editors

Description Description: Test spherical, ovoid, polygonal or subquadratic, involute, with rounded periphery and without umbilicus....
Description Description: Test spherical, ovoid, polygonal or subquadratic, involute, with rounded periphery and without umbilicus. Streptospirally coiled with the last few volutions rarely aligned. Spherical proloculus followed by an enrolled undivided deuteroloculus slowly increasing in size, but more tight in the early whorls forming a juvenarium. Wall calcareous porcelaneous, with a few agglutinate particles. Aperture simple at the end of the deuteroloculus.
Range and distribution: Moscovian (Reitlinger 1950) to Changhsingian (this study); probably cosmopolitan.
(Vachard and Krainer (2022)). [details]
Range and distribution: Moscovian (Reitlinger 1950) to Changhsingian (this study); probably cosmopolitan.
(Vachard and Krainer (2022)). [details]
Hayward, B.W.; Le Coze, F.; Vachard, D.; Gross, O. (2025). World Foraminifera Database. Pseudospira Reitlinger in Vdovenko et al., 1993 †. Accessed at: https://www.marinespecies.org/Foraminifera/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1056576 on 2025-05-18
Date
action
by
original description
(of Pseudolituotuba (Pseudospira) Reitlinger in Vdovenko et al., 1993 †) Vdovenko, M. V.; Rauzer-Chernousova, D. M.; Reitlinger, E. A.; Sabirov, A. A. (1993). Справочник по систематике мелких фораминифер палеозоя (за исключением эндотироидей и пермских многокамерных лагеноидей) - Reference-Book on the Systematics of Paleozoic Smaller Foraminifers (with the exception of endotyroids and Permian multi-chamber lagenoids). <em>Nauka.</em> 1-128., available online at https://books.google.com/books?id=IBRq8aK5H3UC
page(s): p. 62 [details] Available for editors
[request]
taxonomy source Vachard, D.; Krainer, K. (2022). Calcareous algae and foraminifers across the Permian-Triassic boundary interval (uppermost Bellerophon Formation and basal Werfen Formation) in the Dolomites (South Tyrol – Trentino, Italy). <em>Palaeontographica Abteilung A.</em> 324(1-6): 1-173., available online at https://doi.org/10.1127/pala/2022/0128 [details] Available for editors
[request]
page(s): p. 62 [details] Available for editors

taxonomy source Vachard, D.; Krainer, K. (2022). Calcareous algae and foraminifers across the Permian-Triassic boundary interval (uppermost Bellerophon Formation and basal Werfen Formation) in the Dolomites (South Tyrol – Trentino, Italy). <em>Palaeontographica Abteilung A.</em> 324(1-6): 1-173., available online at https://doi.org/10.1127/pala/2022/0128 [details] Available for editors

From editor or global species database
Description Description: Test spherical, ovoid, polygonal or subquadratic, involute, with rounded periphery and without umbilicus. Streptospirally coiled with the last few volutions rarely aligned. Spherical proloculus followed by an enrolled undivided deuteroloculus slowly increasing in size, but more tight in the early whorls forming a juvenarium. Wall calcareous porcelaneous, with a few agglutinate particles. Aperture simple at the end of the deuteroloculus.Range and distribution: Moscovian (Reitlinger 1950) to Changhsingian (this study); probably cosmopolitan.
(Vachard and Krainer (2022)). [details]