Spumellaria Ehrenberg, 1875

Vishnevskaya, Valentina S. & Kozlova, Genrietta E., 2012, Volgian and Santonian-Campanian radiolarian events of the Russian Arctic and Pacific Rim, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 57 (4), pp. 773-790 : 786

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2011.0040

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B5F0FF7E-447F-4DCC-B68F-F78847FE08FC

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C92F33-FFAD-FFB5-FFEE-FE68D928E567

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Spumellaria Ehrenberg, 1875
status

 

Order Spumellaria Ehrenberg, 1875 View in CoL Family Sponguridae Haeckel, 1862 Genus Spongurus Haeckel, 1862

Type species: Spongurus cylindricus Haeckel, 1860 , Recent, Pacific ocean.

Spongurus arcticus Kozlova and Vishnevskaya sp. nov. Fig. 7A–C View Fig .

Etymology: In reference to the Arctic Realm.

Holotype: GIN K22−2−57 (see Fig. 7A View Fig ).

Type locality: Borehole 22, Ust−Manja, western Siberia, Russia.

Type horizon: Lower Campanian, Upper Cretaceous.

Diagnosis.—Elongated monoaxonic skeleton of small or average sizes, subrectangular in outline, with increased in width polar tips, without patagium and terminal spines.

Description.—Stick−shaped cylindrical spongy skeleton extending along one axis, covered by spongodiscid texture. Skeleton consisting of three main elements: spherical central part formed by several concentric or spiral cameral rings, surrounding central microsphere, and two polar processes terminating in pole−like beams. Polar processes and spherical central part as a rule have irregular spongodiscid tissue or are sometimes spongy−porous. Pylome located at one of the poles is quite rare.

Measurements (in µm).—Length of longitudinal axis: 190; length of transverse axis: 55; pore diameter: 3–8. The skeleton varies in size along the longitudinal (170–210) and transverse (45–70).

Remarks.—The new species differs from congeners in having a cylindrical, stick−shaped subrectangular skeleton and in the absence of firm polar spines.

Geographic and stratigraphic range.—Boreal realm; Arctic Margin, Kara, and Volga basins, Russia.

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