overview (8)
Arkhangelskiales (2)
Eiffellithales (3)
Holococcoliths (26)
Nannoliths (10)
Podorhabdales (7)
Watznaueriales (1)
Order ZYGODISCALES Young & Bown 1997
Taxa included: The extant families Helicosphaeraceae and Pontosphaeraceae and extinct Family Zygodiscaceae. These show highly variable shape, but similar structure, and there is strong palaeontological evidence for their evolutionary connections (Romein 1979; Aubry 1989).
| Helicosphaeraceae | ||
| Pontosphaeraceae | ||
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Zygodiscaceae (Palaeogene only) |
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Coccolith structure: V-units form outer rim; in Pontosphaeraceae, this is a narrow cycle of anticlockwise-imbricating elements, in the Helicosphaeraceae, a helical flange. The R-units form a proximal plate of rather regular, inward-growing elements and a distal blanket, which typically appears as a mass of minute, tangentially-elongated crystallites. Growth does not occur downwards from the proto-coccolith ring and so the alternating belt of V-R nuclei remains clearly visible on the proximal surface.
Life-cycles and culture studies: Helicosphaera carteri and H. wallichii have been cultured repeatedly (Inouye pers. comm.; Probert & Houdan 2004) and Scyphosphaera apsteinii once (Probert & Houdan 2004). No life-cycle transitions have been observed in these cultures, but combination coccospheres have been observed for Helicosphaera (Cros et al. 2000; Geisen et al. 2002), Pontosphaera and Scyphosphaera (Frada et al. 2008). These indicate that the haploid phase forms holococcoliths with distinctive rhomboid-array ultrastructure (formerly included in the genus Syracolithus).
Neogene: Helicosphaera; Helicosphaeraceae; hyalina; Pontosphaera; Pontosphaeraceae; Scyphosphaera; Syracolithus; Zygodiscales; Holococcoliths
Paleogene: Pontosphaera; Pontosphaeraceae
Neogene: Pontosphaera
Paleogene: Pontosphaera
Braarudosphaera Deflandre 1947 [Pontosphaera]
Description: Pentaliths approximately pentagonal, sutures go to edges of pentagon. NB In Micrantholithus sutures go to vertices of the pentagon.
Remarks:
Type species: Pontosphaera bigelowii Gran & Braarud 1935.
Original description:
Neogene: Braarudosphaera; Micrantholithus; Pontosphaera
Paleogene: Pontosphaera
Pontosphaera multipora (Kamptner, 1948) Roth, 1970 [Discolithus]
Description: Rim elevated, 3 or more several cycles of pores.
Remarks:
Original description:
Neogene: Pontosphaera; Pontosphaera multipora
Paleogene: Pontosphaera; Pontosphaera multipora
Pontosphaera discopora Schiller, 1925
Description: Rim elevated, 3 or more several cycles of pores.
Remarks:
Original description:
Neogene: Pontosphaera; Pontosphaera discopora
Paleogene: Pontosphaera
Helicosphaera perch-nielseniae (Haq, 1971) Jafar and Martini, 1975 [Helicopontosphaera]
Description: Like H. obliqua but pores narrower and shape more oblong, less spindle-like (N.B. criteria for separating H. obliqua and H. perch-nielseniae vary between authors).
Range: NP23 to NN6.
Original description:
Variant: H. elongata Theodoridis, 1984 - more elongate and with more rectangular outline.
Neogene: Helicosphaera perch-nielseniae; Pontosphaera
Paleogene: Helicosphaera perch-nielseniae; Pontosphaera
Helicosphaera sellii (Bukry and Bramlette, 1969) Jafar and Martini, 1975 [Helicopontosphaera]
Description: Like H. carteri but pores large.
Remarks:
Range: NN12 to 19. Last occurrence has been used in some zonatons but is rather diachronous
Original description:
Variant: H. omanica Sato, Kameo and Takayama, 1991 - bar missing, ? dissolved. Also similar to H. neogranulata.
Neogene: Helicosphaera sellii; Pontosphaera
Paleogene: Pontosphaera
Genus Scyphosphaera Lohmann, 1902
Description: Coccospheres with Pontosphaera-like body coccoliths and equatorial coccoliths with rims elevated into vase-like structures (lopadoliths).
Remarks: In fossil assemblages, only lopadoliths are assigned to Scyphosphaera.
Numerous Neogene species have been described, often based on subtle variations in outline, but since the single modern species S. apsteinii shows considerable variation in lopadolith outline a broader species concept seems justified. There is, however, far more variation in Scyphosphaera morphology in the Late Miocene and Pliocene than in the Quaternary and at the present day. Three main late Neogene species are certainly separable; S. apsteinii, S. pulcherimma and S. globulata. The table below summarises the main Neogene morphotypes and for each one possible synonyms are listed on the species page. This arguably represents a useful compromise between the extremes of lumping to three species or splitting to 30 or more. See also Jafar (1975), Perch-Nielsen (1984) Aubry (1990) and Siesser (1998).
Original description:
| |
apsteinii | |
pulcherrima |
| |
globulata | |
tubifera |
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intermedia |
ventriosa | |
| |
lagena |
cylindrica |
Neogene: Pontosphaera; Scyphosphaera
Paleogene: Pontosphaera