dcsimg

Cyclocibicides ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by wikipedia ES

Cyclocibicides es un género de foraminífero bentónico de la subfamilia Annulocibicidinae, de la familia Cibicididae, de la superfamilia Planorbulinoidea, del suborden Rotaliina[1]​ y del orden Rotaliida.[2]​ Su especie tipo es Planorbulina vermiculata. Su rango cronoestratigráfico abarca el Holoceno.

Clasificación

Cyclocibicides incluye a la siguiente especie:[3][4][5]

Bibliografía

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. Encyclopedia of the Life, en http://eol.org/
  4. World Modern Foraminifera Database, en http://www.marinespecies.org/foraminifera/index.php
  5. Classifications Browser en http://www.ubio.org/browser/classifications.php?conceptID=13894357&expand=1&namebankID= Página 1 de 134
 title=
license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autores y editores de Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia ES

Cyclocibicides: Brief Summary ( Spanish; Castilian )

provided by wikipedia ES

Cyclocibicides es un género de foraminífero bentónico de la subfamilia Annulocibicidinae, de la familia Cibicididae, de la superfamilia Planorbulinoidea, del suborden Rotaliina​ y del orden Rotaliida.​ Su especie tipo es Planorbulina vermiculata. Su rango cronoestratigráfico abarca el Holoceno.

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
Autores y editores de Wikipedia
original
visit source
partner site
wikipedia ES

Diagnosis

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Test attached, discoidal, the somewhat irregular early chambers in a trochospiral coil, spiral side flattened against the attachment, chambers inflated on the free side, later chambers low and cyclical, sutures depressed, periphery rounded; wall calcareous, optically radial, more coarsely perforate on the unattached side; aperture of large sutural pores on the attached spiral side and scattered peripheral pores that later become foramina connecting the successive annular chambers. Holocene; Mediterranean. (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.

license
cc-by-4.0
copyright
WoRMS Editorial Board
contributor
Tomas Cedhagen [email]