Foraminifera taxon details

Eotubespina Vachard & Krainer, 2022 †

1718339  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:1718339)

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marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
fossil only
feminine
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
page(s): p. 31 [details] Available for editors  PDF available [request]
Original description Test similar in shape, size, wall thickness and microstructure to Eotuberitina, but distinct by its finely spinose wall; a...  
Original description Test similar in shape, size, wall thickness and microstructure to Eotuberitina, but distinct by its finely spinose wall; a character which is limited to the Capitanian/Midian-Lopingian times. Diplosphaerinoid stages of life rarely found: Diplosphaerina ex gr. inaequalis in Vachard (1980: pl. 25, fig. 13); Diplosphaerina dzhagadzuensis Pronina in Kotlyar et al., (1989: pl. 3, fig. 20); Eotuberitina spinosa in Gaillot & Vachard (2007: pl. 7, fig. 4); and Diplosphaerina sp. in Wignall et al. (2012: fig. 10B).
Range and distribution: Latest middle-late Permian; especially known in the Perigondwanan/Cimmerian area (western to central Tethyan province, but is present in both Paleotethys and Neotethys): Southern Italy (Monte Facito; Vachard & Miconnet 1990); Crimea (Kotlyar et al.1999); Transcaucasia (Kotlyar et al. 1989); northern Caucasus (Pronina-Nestell & Nestell 2001); Oman (Lys in Montenat et al. 1977); Zagros (Lys et al. 1980; Gaillot & Vachard 2007); Alborz (Partoazar 1995); Central Iran (Shahinfar et al. 2020); Afghanistan (Vachard 1980); Central Pamir (G. Pronina 1996a; Dronov 2004); Ladakh Himalaya (Lys et al. 1980) and South China (Gaillot & Vachard 2007). Discovered in the latest Permian of the northwestern Dolomites (South Tyrol, Italy).
(Vachard and Krainer (2022)). [details]
Hayward, B.W.; Le Coze, F.; Vachard, D.; Gross, O. (2025). World Foraminifera Database. Eotubespina Vachard & Krainer, 2022 †. Accessed at: https://www.marinespecies.org/foraminifera/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1718339 on 2025-05-12
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2023-11-13 15:45:57Z
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original description 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
page(s): p. 31 [details] Available for editors  PDF available [request]
From editor or global species database
Original description Test similar in shape, size, wall thickness and microstructure to Eotuberitina, but distinct by its finely spinose wall; a character which is limited to the Capitanian/Midian-Lopingian times. Diplosphaerinoid stages of life rarely found: Diplosphaerina ex gr. inaequalis in Vachard (1980: pl. 25, fig. 13); Diplosphaerina dzhagadzuensis Pronina in Kotlyar et al., (1989: pl. 3, fig. 20); Eotuberitina spinosa in Gaillot & Vachard (2007: pl. 7, fig. 4); and Diplosphaerina sp. in Wignall et al. (2012: fig. 10B).
Range and distribution: Latest middle-late Permian; especially known in the Perigondwanan/Cimmerian area (western to central Tethyan province, but is present in both Paleotethys and Neotethys): Southern Italy (Monte Facito; Vachard & Miconnet 1990); Crimea (Kotlyar et al.1999); Transcaucasia (Kotlyar et al. 1989); northern Caucasus (Pronina-Nestell & Nestell 2001); Oman (Lys in Montenat et al. 1977); Zagros (Lys et al. 1980; Gaillot & Vachard 2007); Alborz (Partoazar 1995); Central Iran (Shahinfar et al. 2020); Afghanistan (Vachard 1980); Central Pamir (G. Pronina 1996a; Dronov 2004); Ladakh Himalaya (Lys et al. 1980) and South China (Gaillot & Vachard 2007). Discovered in the latest Permian of the northwestern Dolomites (South Tyrol, Italy).
(Vachard and Krainer (2022)). [details]
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