WoRMS taxon details

Buliminoides Cushman, 1911

415135  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:415135)

accepted
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marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
recent + fossil
feminine
Cushman, J. A. (1911). A monograph of the Foraminifera of the North Pacific Ocean. Part II. Textulariidae. <em>Bulletin of the United States National Museum.</em> 71(2): 1-108., available online at https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/7878502
page(s): p. 90 [details]  OpenAccess publication 
Hayward, B.W.; Le Coze, F.; Vachard, D.; Gross, O. (2024). World Foraminifera Database. Buliminoides Cushman, 1911. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=415135 on 2024-04-18
Date
action
by
2009-09-23 14:01:30Z
created
db_admin
2010-09-25 05:43:40Z
changed
2014-05-12 08:42:59Z
changed
2020-03-11 11:23:19Z
changed

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original description Cushman, J. A. (1911). A monograph of the Foraminifera of the North Pacific Ocean. Part II. Textulariidae. <em>Bulletin of the United States National Museum.</em> 71(2): 1-108., available online at https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/7878502
page(s): p. 90 [details]  OpenAccess publication 

additional source Loeblich, A. R.; Tappan, H. (1987). Foraminiferal Genera and their Classification. Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, New York. 970pp., available online at https://books.google.pt/books?id=n_BqCQAAQBAJ [details]  Available for editors  PDF available [request] 
 
 Present  Inaccurate  Introduced: alien  Containing type locality 
From editor or global species database
Diagnosis Test elongate, circular in section, with high trochospiral coil, about five broad and low, strongly oblique chambers per whorl, enrolled around an open umbilicus, septal walls commonly resorbed, perhaps during reproduction, sutures obscured by ornamentation; wall calcareous, optically radial, finely perforate, surface with prominent longitudinal costae nearly perpendicular to the sutures but oblique to the test axis, costae may be continuous and occasionally bifurcate, or may be somewhat irregular and rugose in appearance, terminal face with radial striae; aperture interiomarginal, umbilical, in a depressed part of the terminal face; sexual reproduction plastogamic. Oligocene to Holocene; cosmopolitan, on shallow water reefs. (Loeblich & Tappan, 1987, Foraminiferal Genera and Their Classification) [details]