Lophophaena amictoria Renaudie and Lazarus 2015

Lophophaena amictoria Renaudie and Lazarus, 2015 Plate 21, Figs. 1A – 3B. Peridium spp., Lazarus and Pallant, 1989 (partim.), pl. 2, fig. 15. Lophophaena amictoria n. sp., Renaudie and Lazarus, 2015, pl. 8 figs. 1–3. Lophophaena clevei, Trubovitz et al., 2020, supplementary data 7. Remarks. This spe...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Trubovitz, Sarah, Renaudie, Johan, Lazarus, David, Noble, Paula
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10551518
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C96F50FFA7FFCC75DFE4EFFE91C130
Description
Summary:Lophophaena amictoria Renaudie and Lazarus, 2015 Plate 21, Figs. 1A – 3B. Peridium spp., Lazarus and Pallant, 1989 (partim.), pl. 2, fig. 15. Lophophaena amictoria n. sp., Renaudie and Lazarus, 2015, pl. 8 figs. 1–3. Lophophaena clevei, Trubovitz et al., 2020, supplementary data 7. Remarks. This species has a similar structure to Lophophaena clevei Petrushevskaya, 1971, and we misidentified it as such in our previous study. However, L. amictoria differs from L. clevei in that it is larger overall, has a more globular cephalis shape, and a relatively inflated neck area. Range. Middle Miocene—Late Pleistocene in the EEP (Table 1). Early Miocene—Pleistocene in the Southern Ocean. Specimens from Lazarus and Pallant (1989) would indicate the range of this species extends back to the Early Oligocene. Published as part of Trubovitz, Sarah, Renaudie, Johan, Lazarus, David & Noble, Paula, 2022, Late Neogene Lophophaenidae (Nassellaria, Radiolaria) from the eastern equatorial Pacific, pp. 1-158 in Zootaxa 5160 (1) on page 53, DOI:10.11646/zootaxa.5160.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/10544058