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Delosina ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by wikipedia ES

Delosina es un género de foraminífero bentónico de la familia Delosinidae, de la superfamilia Delosinoidea, del suborden Buliminina y del orden Buliminida.[1][2]​ Su especie tipo es Polymorphina? complexa. Su rango cronoestratigráfico abarca el Holoceno.

Discusión

Clasificaciones previas incluían Delosina en el suborden Rotaliina del orden Rotaliida.[3]

Clasificación

Delosina incluye a las siguientes especies:[4][5]

Bibliografía

  1. Loeblich, A.R., Jr. y Tappan, H. (1992). Present Status of Foraminiferal Classification. Studies in Benthic Foraminifera en Benthos'90, Sendai (1990), Tokai University Press, 93-102.
  2. World Modern Foraminifera Database, en http://www.marinespecies.org/foraminifera/index.php
  3. Loeblich, A.R., Jr. y Tappan, H. (1987). Foraminiferal genera and their classification. Van Nostrand Reinhold Company (ed.), 2 vol., 1-970, 1-212 + 847 láminas.
  4. Encyclopedia of the Life, en http://eol.org/
  5. Classifications Browser en http://www.ubio.org/browser/classifications.php?conceptID=13894357&expand=1&namebankID= Página 1 de 134
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Delosina: Brief Summary ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by wikipedia ES

Delosina es un género de foraminífero bentónico de la familia Delosinidae, de la superfamilia Delosinoidea, del suborden Buliminina y del orden Buliminida.​​ Su especie tipo es Polymorphina? complexa. Su rango cronoestratigráfico abarca el Holoceno.

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Diagnosis

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Test elongate, ovate in form, rounded in section, chambers in a high trochospiral coil of three strongly overlapping chambers per whorl, increasing rapidly in height as added, final whorl occupying most of the test length, sutures depressed, strongly oblique; wall calcareous, optically granular, finely perforate, surface smooth; aperture consists of fine pores in an arched spongy area at the base of the apertural face, large secondary sutural openings lead into subsutural canals that terminate in this spongy area. Holocene; Mediterranean; Antarctic; Pacific. (Loeblich & Tappan, 1987, Foraminiferal Genera and Their Classification)

Reference

Loeblich, A. R.; Tappan, H. (1987). Foraminiferal Genera and their Classification. Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, New York. 970pp.

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Tomas Cedhagen [email]