Bibradya densicamerata, Liu & Vachard & Cózar & Coronado, 2023

Liu, Chao, Vachard, Daniel, Cózar, Pedro & Coronado, Ismael, 2023, New species and evolution of the foraminiferal family Janischewskinidae in the middle-upper Mississippian of South China, Palaeontologia Electronica (a 2) 26 (1), pp. 1-27 : 14

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26879/1238

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C4AC62DE-5568-48BF-B9AE-B04DDFE2287A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10987780

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CC448745-8DBE-4E77-923B-DBDF19EC8679

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:CC448745-8DBE-4E77-923B-DBDF19EC8679

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Bibradya densicamerata
status

sp. nov.

Bibradya densicamerata sp. nov.

Figure 8A‒F View FIGURE 8

zoobank.org/ CC448745-8DBE-4E77-923B-DBDF19EC8679

Derivation of the Name. For the numerous chambers in the juvenarium.

Material. Holotype ( HPU-KC75-488 , Figure 8B View FIGURE 8 ) and twenty-five paratypes ( Table 3 View TABLE 3 ).

Repository. School of Resources and Environment, Henan polytechnic University .

Type Locality and Horizon. Kacai section, Tarusian (early Serpukhovian).

Occurrence. From the top of the Mikhailovian to the top of the Serpukhovian.

Diagnosis. Large Bibradya with a juvenarium densely packed composed of numerous quadratic chambers and a rapid expansion in the final 1.5 whorls composed of more rounded and irregular chambers.

Description. Large test composed of 3‒4 whorls for mature specimens, ranging from 1300‒1500 μm. Coiling is irregular throughout, changing progressively the plane, and increasing rapidly the evolution rate in the final 1.5 whorls. The height of the lumen in the final chamber reaches 320‒720 μm, with a H/D ratio of 0.2‒0.41. Chambers are numerous in the inner whorls, approximately 7‒8 in the second whorl, and 8‒12 in the fourth whorl. Septa are straight in the inner whorls and blunt with an incipient bifurcation in the final whorl. Wall microgranular. Cribrate aperture composed of multiple elements present in the entire apertural zone.

Remarks. Species differs from B. tenella ( Figure 8G‒I View FIGURE 8 ) by the distinctively compressed juvenarium, more chambers, and higher number of whorls.

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