439 NOAA Technical Report NMFS Circular 439 c r w .^ \. ^^Mt% O* ^ \ / Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States. Protozoa: Sarcodina: Benthic Foraminifera Ruth Todd and Doris Low ["•;.,'.""■; „ June 1981 ^^^^1^?^^. Mass. U.S. DFPARTMFNT OF COMMF,|^nF NationaT^ceanic and Atmospheric Admin National Marine Fisheries Service istration NOAA TECHNICAL REPORTS National Marine Fisheries Service, Circulars The major responsibililies of the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) are 10 monitor and assess the abundance and geographic distribution of fishery resources, to understand and predict fluctuations in ihe quantity and distribution of these resources, and to establish levels for optimum use of the resources. NMFS is also charged with the development and implementation of policies for managing national fishing grounds, development and enforce- ment of domestic fisheries regulations, surveillance of foreign fishing off United States coastal waters, and the development and enforcement of interna- tional fishery agreements and policies. NMFS also assists the fishing industry through marketing service and economic analysis programs, and mortgage insurance and vessel construction subsidies. It collects, analyzes, and publishes statistics on various phases of the industry. The NOAA Technical Report NMFS Circular series continues a series that has been in existence since 1941 . The Circulars are technical publications of general interest intended to aid conservation and management. Publications that review in considerable detail and at a high technical level certain broad areas of research appear in this series. Technical papers originating in economics studies and from management investigations appear in the Circular series. NOAA Technical Report NMFS Circulars are available free in limited numbers to governmental agencies, both Federal and State. They are also available in exchange for other scientific and technical publications in Ihe marine sciences. Individual copies may be obtained (unless otherwise noted) from D822. User Services Branch. Environmental Science Information Center. NOAA, Rockville, MD 20852. Recent Circulars are: 418. Annotated bibliography of four Atlantic scombrids: Scomberomorus brasiliensis, S. cavalla. S. maculalus, and S. regalis. By Charles S. Manooch 111, Eugene L. Nakamura, and Ann Bowman Hall. December 1978, iii + 166 p. 419. Marine llora and fauna of the nonheastern United States. Protozoa: Sar- codina: Amoebae. By Eugene C. Bovee and Thomas K. Sawyer. January 1979. iii + 56 p.. 77 figs. For sale by the Superintendent of Documents. U.S. Govern- ment Printing Office. Washington, D.C. 20402, Stock No. 003-017-0O433-3. 420. Preliminary keys to otoliths of some adult fishes of the Gulf of Alaska, Bering Sea. and Beaulbrt Sea. By James E. Morrow. February 1979, iii + 32 p., 9 pi. 421 . Larval development of shallow water barnacles of the Carolinas (Cirripe- dia; Thoracica) with keys to naupliar stages. By William H. Lang. February 1979. iv * -39 p.. 36 figs., 17 tables, 422. A revision of the catsharks, family Scyliohinidae. By Stewart Springer. April 1979, v+ 142 p.. 97 figs. For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office. Washington. D.C. 20402, Stock No. 003-020-00147-5. 423. Marine tlora and fauna of the northeastern United Slates. Crustacea: Cumacea. By Les Walling. April 1979, iii + 23 p., 35 figs. For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D.C. 20402, Stock No. 003-017.(X)446-5. 424. Guide to the leptocephali (Elopiformes. Anguilliformes, and Notacanthi- formes). By David G. Smith. July 1979, iv + 39 p.. 54 figs. 425. Marine fiora and launa of the northeastern United States. Arthropoda: Cirripedia. By Victor A. Zullo. April 1979, iii + 29 p.. 40 figs. For sale by the Superintendent of Documents. Washington, D.C. 20402, Stock No. 0030I7-0O453-8. 426. Synopsis of biological data on the rock crab. Cancer irroralus Say By Thomas E. Bigford. May 1979, v-)-26 p., II figs., 21 tables. 427. Ocean variability in the U.S. Fishery Conservation Zone, 1976. By Julien R. Goulel. Jr., and Elizabeth D. Haynes, editors, July 1979, iii + 362 p. (427.) Introduction. By Julien R. Goulel. Jr July 1979. p. 1-2. (427.) Summary By Julien R. Goulel, Jr. July 1979, p. 3-10. (427.) Atmospheric circulation in 1976. By Elizabeth D, Haynes. July 1979, p. 11-18, 2 figs. (427.) Atmospheric climatology and its effect on sea surface temperature— 1976. By Robert R. Dickson and Jerome Namias. July 1979. p. 19-33. 6 figs. (427.) Eastern Pacific sea surface conditions in 1976. By Elizabeth D. Haynes. July 1979, p. 35-42. (427.) Sea surface conditions in the western North Atlantic in 1976. By Julien R. Goulet. Jr.. and Elizabeth D. Haynes. July 1976, p. 43-50. (427.) Anomalies of monthly mean sea level along the wesl coasts of North and South America. By Dale E. Bretschneider and Douglas R. McLain. July 1979, p. 51-64,6 figs. (427.) Coastal upwelling off western North America, 1975. By Craig S. Nelson. July 1979. p. 65-75. 2 figs., 2 tables. (427.) Oceanic conditions during 1976 between San Francisco and Honolulu as observed from Ships of Opportunity. By J. F. T. Saur and D. R. McLain. July 1979, p. 77-92, 5 figs., 2 tables. (427.) The 1976 El Nino and recent progress in monitoring and prediction. By William H. Quinn. July 1979. p, 93-1 10, 7 figs., 4 tables. (427.) Sea surface temperature anomalies. By Douglas R. McLain. July 1979, p. 111-149. app. 1. (427.) Fluctuations of sea surface temperature and density at coastal stations during 1976. By Douglas R, McLain, July 1979, p. 151-166. 7 figs., app. 1. (427.) Data on cold weather conditions along the Atlantic and tjulf coasts dur- ing the fall and winter of 1975-77. By J. Lockwood Chamberlin and Reed S. Armstrong, July 1979, p. 167-174. 1 fig., 1 table. (427.) Wind driven transport Atlantic coast and Gulf of Mexico. By Merton C. Ingraham. July 1979. p, 175-208, 4 figs., 1 table, app. 1. (427.) Sea surface temperature distribution from Cape Cod. Massachusens. lo Miami, Florida - 1976. By Joseph W Deaverlll. July 1979. p. 209-229. 3 figs.. 2 tables, app. 1. (427.) Water column thermal structure across the shelf and slope southeast of Sandy Hook. New Jersey, in 1976. By Steven K. Cook. July 1979, p. 231-257, 19 figs. (427.) Anticyclonic Gulf Stream eddies off the Northeastern United States dur- ing 1976. By David Mizenko and J. Lockwood Chamberlin. July 1979, p. 259-280, 16 figs., 2 tables. (427.) River runoff along the Middle Atlantic coasi in 1975. By Elizabeth D. Haynes. July 1979. p. 281-287. 1 fig., 1 table, app. I. (427.) Climatic conditions related lo the fish kill and anoxia off New Jersey during the summer of 1975, By Reed S, Armstrong. July 1979, p. 289-300, 5 figs, (427.) Variations in the position of the shelf water front off the Atlantic coast between Georges Bank and Cape Romain in 1976. By John T. Gunn. July 1979. p. 301-314, 8 figs.. I table. (427.) Temperature structure on the continenial shelf and slope south of New England during 1976. By R. Wylie CrisI and J. Lockwood Chamberlin. July 1979, p. 315-335, 2 figs., app. I. (427.) Continuous plankton records: Zooplankton and net phytoplankton in the Mid-Atlantic Bight, 1976. By Daniel E. Smith and Jack W. Jossi. July 1979, p. 337-348. 7 figs. (427.) Siphonophore ("lipo") swarming in New England coastal waters- update, 1976. By Carolyn A. Rogers. July 1979, p. 349-352, I fig. (427.) Bottom-water temperatures in the Gulf of Maine and on Georges Bank during spring and autumn, 1976. By Clarence W. Davis. July 1979, p. 353-362,5 figs.. 3 tables. NOAA Technical Report NMFS Circular 439 .^qMmos^,. ^"^^i!!^'^" Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States. Protozoa: Sarcodina: Benthic Foraminifera Ruth Todd and Doris Low June 1981 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Malcolm Baldrige, Secretary National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Marine Fisheries Service Terry L. Leitzell, Assistant Administrator for Fisheries FOREWORD This NMFS Circular is part of the subseries "Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United Statesl' which consists of original, illustrated, modern manuals on the identification, classification, and general biology of the estuarine and coastal marine plants and animals of the northeastern United Slates. The manuals are pubhshed at irregular intervals on as many taxa of the region as there are specialists available to collaborate in their preparation. Geographic coverage of the "Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States" is planned to include organisms from the headwaters of estuaries seaward to appro.ximately the 200 m depth on the continental shelf from Maine to Virginia, but may vary somewhat with each major taxon and the interests of collaborators. Whenever possible representative specimens dealt with in the manuals are deposited in the reference collections of major museums of the region. The "Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States" is being prepared in col- laboration with systematic specialists in the United States and abroad. Each manual is based primari- ly on recent and ongoing revisionary systematic research and a fresh examination of the plants and animals. Each major taxon, treated in a separate manual, includes an introduction, illustrated glossary, uniform originally illustrated keys, annotated checklist with information when available on distribution, habitat, life history, and related biology, references to the major literature of the group, and a systematic index. These manuals are intended for use by biology students, biologists, biological oceanographers, informed laymen, and others wishing to identify coastal organisms for this region. Often they can serve as guides to additional information about species or groups. The manuals are an outgrowth of the widely used "Keys to Marine Invertebrates of the Woods Hole Region;' edited by R. I. Smith in 1964, and produced under the auspices of the Systematics Ecology Program, Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Mass. After a sufficient number of manuals of related taxonomic groups have been published, the manuals will be revised, grouped, and issued as special volumes, which will consist of compilations for phyla or groups of phyla. CONTENTS Introduction 1 Morphology 1 Classification 1 Collection and study methods 2 Biology 2 Use of the key 2 Glossary 4 Key to species of Foraminifera 5 Annotated list of species 43 Selected bibliography 45 Systematic index 48 Acknowledgments 50 Coordinating Editor's comments 51 The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) does not approve, rec- ommend or endorse any proprietary product or proprietary material mentioned in this publication. No reference shall be made to NMFS, or to this publication furnished by NMFS, in any advertising or sales pro- motion which would indicate or imply that NMFS approves, recommends or endorses any proprietary product or proprietary material mentioned herein, or which has as its purpose an intent to cause directly or indirectly the advertised product to be used or purchased because of this NMFS publication. Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States. Protozoa: Sarcodina: Benthic Foraminifera RUTH TODD and DORIS LOW' ABSTRACT An illuslraled key lo nearshore and shelf species includes 133 taxa. Seventy-nine genera are represented. In an annotated list, the distribution and ecology of each species are recorded within the area of Cape Hatteras lo Nova Scotia and out to a depth of 50 m on the continental shelf. The key is intended lo aid the nonspecialist in identification of the species to be expected in the marshes, estuaries, littoral zone, bays, and inner parts of the continental shelf. INTRODUCTION Foraminifera, an order within the class Sarcodina, are single- celled animals characterized by having a rigid or flexible test, or shell, and pseudopodia consisting of threads of protoplasm. They primarily occupy marine waters, although a few species are able to tolerate brackish conditions and extend into the inter- tidal and estuarine zones. The floors of the outer continental shelf, the continental slope, and the ocean basins (exclusive of the deepest parts of the oceans where calcareous materials are dissolved because of the undersaturation of calcium carbonate) are covered by vast deposits of the empty shells of planktonic Foraminifera. Planktonic Foraminifera, floating during life, shed their empty shells onto the sea floor when the animals reproduce or die. This deposit is known as Globigerma ooze in reference to one of the principal genera involved. Planktonic Foraminifera are very rare over the inner parts of the continental shelf, and none are included in the present key. This key refers only to the bottom-dwelling or benthonic species. Most of the species in the key are geographically wide ranging. Some, such as Cibicides lobatulus and Miliammina fusca, are recorded worldwide, within the limits of their respec- tive environments. A few others, such as Hopkinsina atlantica and Pseudopolymorphina phaleropei, seem to be restricted to a small part of the area studied. A few of the commoner ones, such as Elphidium banletti and Cribrostomoides jeffreysii, are characteristic of Arctic and Subarctic regions. These seem not to extend much farther south than Cape Cod, Mass. For a few others, such as Elphidium galvestonense and Poroeponides lateralis. Cape Cod appears to be the northern limit. Very few of the species in this area, other than those having worldwide distributions, are found in waters south of Cape Hatteras, N.C. Several reports describe and illustrate assemblages from specific facies or areas of coastal regions along the northeastern United States. Among the most useful of these are Bailey (1851); Buzas (1965, 1968); Cushman (1944); Ellison and Nichols (1970); Murray (1969); Parker (1948, 1952a, b); Parker and Athearn (1959); Phleger and Walton (1950); Poag et al. (1980); Ronai (1955); Schafer and Sen Gupta (1%90; Schnitker (1971); Scott and Medioli (1980); Shupack (1934); Tapley (1969); and Todd and Low (1961). In addition, the following references pro- vide useful records of distribution and details of morphology pertaining to certain of the species of the northeastern United States: Brady (1881c); Cushman (1918b, 1920, 1922a, 1923, 1929, 1930, 1931); Cushman and Ozawa (1930); Rhumbler (1904); and Schultze (1854). MORPHOLOGY The morphology of Foraminifera is diverse. In shape they range from a simple spherical or saclike chamber, with or without a single opening, to many-chambered forms in which the chambers succeed one another in a variety of ways, such as in a straight or coiled sequence. The coiling may be complicated by differences in the plane of coiling and by consisting of a single or a double row of chambers. In addition, these shapes and structures can be found combined with any of several kinds of wall structure. Wails may be built of 1) various kinds of foreign material gathered by the animal, or 2) calcium carbonate extracted from seawater and then secreted by the animal, either as solid layers or layers perforated by fine or coarse pores. CLASSIFICATION The shells of Foraminifera have been studied for some 150 yr, initially as a hobby. Interest in them was greatly stimulated shortly before 1920 when they began to be used in the search for petroleum. Because of their small size and abundance in well cores, they served as convenient means of working out geologic structures. Foraminifera continue to be important in geologic investigations, particularly in biostratigraphy, paleoecology, and paleobiology. Very few species of Foraminifera have been cultured for study as living animals, and these studies reveal how little has been learned thus far about life cycles and the natural classification of this highly plastic group of animals. Many classification systems have been applied to the order. Loeblich and Tappan (1964), in addition to proposing the classification currently in favor, summarized the earlier ones. 'U.S. Geological Survey, Woods Hole, MA 02543. ^Schafer, C. T., and B. K. Sen Gupta. 1969. Foraminiferal ecology in polluted estuaries of New Brunswick and Maine. Unpubl. manuscr., 24 p. Atl. Oceanogr. Lab., Bedford Inst., Dartmouth, N.S., Can., Rep. A.O.L. 69-1. No attempt is made to classify systematically the taxa in this key. Instead they are listed alphabetically for ease in locating any specific one. TTiis key separates, as species, several forms that may not be true biologic species but only phenotypes of a single species, i.e., variant forms that reflect the influence of environment upon the genetic constitution of that species. The two species of Miliam- mina, the two species of Spiroplectammina, and the two species of Buccella may fall into this category of phenotypes. This key separates, as species within different genera, some forms that may belong together as a single species. This feature is especially to be expected in the miliolids, a group that is mutable in a single environment as well as highly variable under different envi- ronments. As an example, Quinqueloculina lata and Thloculina brevidentata could probably be regarded as, respectively, quin- queloculine and triloculine forms of a single species. The solving of such questions is beyond the scope of this key, and it seems convenient to have separate names by which to refer to these distinct forms, whether or not they eventually prove to be distinct species. COLLECTION AND STUDY METHODS In the intertidal zone, Foraminifera can be collected easily by simple apparatus. Surface sediment can be collected in nested sieves— a 20-mesh screen above and 200-mesh screen below (having openings of 0.850 and 0.0074 mm)— between which the finer sand is caught and concentrated by washing in the ocean water. Sediment clinging to the roots of marsh plants or scraped off slime-coated cobbles can likewise be washed into and con- centrated between the two nested sieves. A plastic syringe, such as an oven baster, can be used to draw up material carefully, with a minimum disturbance of the surface sediment in or on which Foraminifera live. In fine-grained sediments, a plastic core-barrel liner can be forced several inches into the muddy bottom and then withdrawn to remove an undisturbed segment of sediment. In water too deep to use these means, Foraminifera are generally collected by grab samples or corers. More precise details about collecting and culturing have been described by Arnold (1974). Foraminifera can be treated by the protein stain Rose Bengal (Walton 1952) in order to determine which of the many specimens in the collection were alive and which were merely empty shells that remained after reproduction or death. To prepare a wet sample for study, the sample is washed by a delicate stream of freshwater on a 200-mesh screen, then dried and separated by use of several nested screens into size fractions for ease in examination. Each fraction is spread out thinly on a tray and scanned, using a binocular microscope having magnifications of about x 10- x 90 for the coarser to finer frac- tions. The specimens are picked out from among the sediment grains by use of a moistened sable brush (sizes 000 to 00000 are desirable) and transferred to a cardboard, glass, or plastic shde that has been lightly coated with the water-soluble gum tragacanth. By the use of the moistened brush, an individual specimen can be placed in the most advantageous position for study, or moved into various positions for examination from all aspects. BIOLOGY The littoral species of Foraminifera are easily maintained alive in small jars or bowls kept under cool and low light conditions. and loosely covered to retard evaporation. It is not necessary to add food. The bowl is a self-contained unit in which the Foraminifera live on food materials in the sediment and original seawater in which they were collected. Freshwater should be added occasionally to compensate for evaporation. The food of Foraminifera consists of diatoms, filamentous algae, other microscopic algae, and probably also bacteria. Many species contain, within the protoplasm inside the chamber walls, symbiotic algae which provide food for the Foraminifera by photosynthesis. Those species that do not contain symbiotic algae generally feed by ingestion of food outside the test. Some capture their food from the surrounding seawater (filter feeding), others by grazing on the bottom sediment or on slime- covered shells, rocks, plant stems, or other supports that rise above the sea floor (deposit feeding). Reproduction in Foraminifera has been studied in only a very few species. Asexual reproduction is accomplished by multiple fission of the parent protoplasm, i.e., the breaking up of the nucleus into many parts so that each embryo receives a part of the parent nucleus. This process leaves the parent test empty. Reproduction normally involves alternation of an asexual and a sexual generation, the two generations having certain dif- ferences in their test morphology. The individuals resulting from the asexual phase generally have a larger initial chamber but a smaller adult size than those resuhing from the sexual phase. USE OF THE KEY This key is designed as a finding key, not a classification key. It therefore disregards a natural classification and, in a few places, groups together genera that may have little phylogenetic relationship to one another. Moreover, this key applies only to the species of the inshore waters along the northeastern coast of the United States. Because of this restriction, some dichotomous separations are made on combinations of features that elsewhere could not be combined. In setting up the key we have tried to use easily recognizable features and to explain, in diagrams and words, the differences between features that are not so easily recognizable. The initial dichotomy between agglutinated and secreted tests may become a problem when the agglutination is very fine Figures 1,2. — Planispiral coiling. 3. — Trochospiral coiling. 4-6. — I'niserial, biserial, and Iriserial chamber arrangements. 7.— Milioline coiling and quin- queloculine chamber arrangement. 7a. b. opposite sides; 7c, chambers in transverse section. Chamber a is the last formed; chamber b is the next to la.st; chamber c is the third from last, etc. Each chamber as added continues from the aperture of the previous one; thus, the previous aperture, not visible, is at the opposite end of the test. 8.— Milioline coiling and triloculine chamber arrange- ment comparable with that shown in Figure 7. 9. — Sigmoiline chamber arrangement in transverse section. 10. — Biloculine chamber arrangement in transverse section. II.— Coiling of a double row of chambers, i.e., as if a biserial lest (Fig. 5) were bent into a coil. 11a, lateral view; Mb. lateral view opposite to (hat of 11a; lie, edge view. Chambers are identified by numbers (to indicate the sequence of pairs) and letters tto indicate right and left chambers in each pair). 12-14. — Simple tooth, bifid tooth, and valvelike tooth. 15.— Sim- ple terminal aperture. 16. — Terminal aperture at (he end of a neck surrounded by a phialine lip. 17. — Comma-shaped aperture. 18.— Radiate aperture, con- sisting of a terminal aperture surrounded by a ring of radial shts. a. side view; b, top view. 19.— VasiglobuMne aperture, consisting of a terminal aperture sur- rounded by a ring of small pores, a. side view; b, top view. 20.— Two specimens attached by their umbilical surfaces in plaslogamy. 21.— Supple- mentary chambers (s). a whorl of smaller chambers, each covering the inner (um- bilical) part of each larger chamber. 22.— Supplementary pores, an area of large openings over the face of the final chamber. 23. — Septal bridges, a series of prolongations of the chamber extending backward over the depressed suture. chambe r umbilicus / periphery grained, or when the secreted test is coarsely porous or its wall surface rugose. High magnifications, to x 90 or even more, are useful in determining the true nature of the wall. Another method for recognizing presence or absence of porosity is to touch the specimen with a lightly moistened brush and to watch (under the microscope) the water as it either evaporates around the imperforate test or sinks into the finely porous one. Internal structures, such as tubes and septa, and chamber arrangements can be observed by use of transmitted light, rather than the reflected light customarily used for study of Foraminifera. To do this, the specimen must be transferred from the usual cardboard slide to a glass slide. Glycerine or clarifying oils such as those used for petrographic study are useful aids in observing internal features of Foraminifera without the necessity of breaking the tests. The tests of some species are described as flexible or collaps- ible. This feature is demonstrable only when the animal is first collected and is still in seawater. As soon as it is dried, the test collapses into a flattened shape or shows concavities instead of convexities over the empty chambers. Some of these collapsed tests may reinflate when wetted. By observation of these sorts of deformity, one can conclude that the test was flexible. At the many final dichotomies in this key, the separations are often made between species on the basis of imprecise features that, if only one species is under study, are very difficult to assess. Such imprecise features include slight differences in shape of test, length of septal bridges, or angle of sutures; small differences in number of chambers; differences in degree of inflation or compression, of roughness of wall, or of coarseness of pores; and differences of rigidity and flexibility. The subjec- tive judgment required to choose between such nonspecific separations can be aided by two specific factors: size of the specimen and its habitat. Size is included in the key descriptions and habitat is included in the annotated list following the key. GLOSSARY acute Sharp, angled. agglutinated, arenaceous Test composed of foreign material, such as mud, sediment grains, shell fragments, spicules, or other Foraminifera, gathered by the animal. annular Arranged in a ring. apertural face A flattened area on the edge of the test upon which or at the base of which, the aperture is situated (see Figs. 2b, 3c, lib, 17, 22). aperture Main (largest) opening or openings from the interior to exterior of the final chamber of the test (see Figs. 1, 3c, lib, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 18b, 19b, 21, 22). apical end Initial end, basal, referring to the beginning of the test. arched-shaped aperture (see Fig. 3c). arenaceous, agglutinated Test composed of foreign material, such as mud, sediment grains, shell fragments, spicules, or other Foraminifera, gathered by the animal. attached Test is cemented to a foreign object. biconvex Bulging on both sides. bifid tooth Having two prongs or branches (see Fig. 13). biloculine coiling In which two chambers constitute a whorl, each chamber is half a coil long, and the chambers are added at intervals of 180° around the axis of coiling so that each succeeding chamber completely encloses the next to the last preceding chamber, and only two chambers are visible from the exterior— one from one side of the test and both from the other (see Fig. 10). biserial Chambers arranged in two adjacent rows (see Fig. 5). calcareous Composed of lime (CaC03). chamber Subdivision of the test making an enclosure or cavity, inside which the animal lives (see Figs. 2a, 3a). coil (or whorl ) A ring of chambers or, in a single-chambered test, a complete rotation of the single chamber (see Figs. 1 , 2a, 3a, 11a, b, 21, 22). coiled (or spiral ) side The side of the test on which the earlier whorls are visible (see Fig. 3a). comma-shaped aperture In which the aperture is rounded at one end and pinched together at the opposite end (see Fig. 17). complex aperture Aperture consisting of more than one open- ing (see Figs. 18, 19, 22). compressed Flattened. concavo-convex Hollowed out on one side and bulging on the other. costae; costate Raised ribs; covered with raised ribs. crenulated Notched. cribrate aperture Consisting of a group of large pores (see Fig. 22). depressed Indented, incised, lower than the surrounding sur- face (said of sutures or umbilicus)(see Fig. 3c). equatorial aperture Opening on the edge of the test. evolute coiling Coiling in which all the earlier whorls of the test are visible and not hidden under later whorls (see Fig. 1). excavated Lower than the surrounding area. flush Level with the surface of the surrounding area. friable Crumbly, easily broken apart. granular; granules Finely roughened; grainy. hispid Very finely spinose, hairy. hyaline Transparent or translucent; having a luster like glass. imperforate (or porcellaneous) wall Solid, lacking pores; hav- ing a luster like porcelain. incised Indented. initial end The beginning of the test. involute coiling Coiling in which all the earlier whorls are hidden under the final whorl (see Figs. 2a, b). keel A distinct rim (see Figs. 2a, b). limbate Thickened. lobe An inflated part of the chamber. lobulate Scalloped in outline (said of the periphery as observed in side view) (see Figs. 3a, b). miliolids Specimens belonging in the family Miliolidae, characterized by having an imperforate wall. milioline coiling Coiling in which two chambers make up each whorl (see Figs. 7, 8, 9, 10). multiserial Chambers arranged in more than a single row (see Figs. 5, 6). neck A slender tubular end of the final chamber (see Fig. 16). ovate Egg-shaped, having a larger diameter toward one end than toward the other. papillae; papillate Small, blunt, raised knobs; covered by small, blunt raised knobs. perforate wall Penetrated by very fine pores; porous. periphery; peripheral Edge; at the edge (see Figs. 2b, 3c). phenotypes Two or more forms of a species that differ in their visible characters. phialine lip Surrounded by an outward-fiaring rim, like that on a vial (see Fig. 16). planispiral coiling Coiling in a single plane (see Figs. 1, 2a, b). planoconvex Flat on one side and bulging on the other. plastogamy Reproductive stage in which two specimens have their umbilical surfaces cemented together (see Fig. 20). plug A massive deposit of shell material within or filling the umbilical area. porcellaneous (or imperforate) wall Solid, lacking pores; hav- ing a luster like porcelain. pore Small opening from interior to exterior of the test. primary aperture The major opening of the final chamber of the test. pseudochitinous Composed of a flexible organic compound, secreted by the animal, that makes up the wall or serves as cement in certain species. pseudopodia Slender threads of protoplasm extending out- ward from the living animal through the aperture (and pores if any) of the test. quadrangular Roughly four-sided. quinqueloculine coiling Coiling in which five chambers consti- tute a whorl; each chamber is half a coil long and the chambers are added at intervals of 144° around the axis of coiling (but 72° from the adjacent chamber) so that three chambers are visible from one side and four from the opposite side (see Fig. 7). radiate aperture Terminal aperture characterized by radiating slits (see Figs. 2a, b, 18). reticulated Appearing as a meshwork or network. ribs Ridges of thickened shell material. rotaline (or trochospiral) coiling Coiling in a rising spire rather than a single plane (see Figs. 3a-c). rugose Rough. sac A simple sacklike form. secreted Derived from the metabolic functions of the animal. septal bridges A series of fingerlike bridges across the suture (see Fig. 23). septum, septa Internal wall or walls separating or subdividing chambers. sigmoiline coiling Coiling in which each chamber is half a coil long and the chambers are added at intervals of slightly more than 180° around the axis of coiling, resulting in a sigmoid transverse section (see Fig. 9). siliceous Composed of quartz grains (silica) cemented together with a silica cement. spine, spines A needlelike projection (or projections) of shell material at the initial end of the test, along the basal parts of chambers, or completely covering the test. spiral Coiling in a ring. spiral (or coiled) side The side of the test on which the earlier whorls are visible (see Fig. 3a). striae; striated Fine grooves or channels; covered with fine grooves or channels. subglobular Approaching the shape of a sphere. supplementary aperture An opening or openings other than the major opening into the test; larger than pores (see Fig. 22). supplementary chambers Smaller chambers covering or in addition to the larger chambers (see Fig. 21). suture Line between adjacent chambers; intersection of in- ternal septum and exterior wall (see Figs. 1, 2a, 3a, 4, 5, 6, 7a, b, 8a, b, 20, 21, 22). taxa Units of any rank in taxonomy, such as genus, species, or subspecies (singular taxon). terminal aperture At then end, rather than at the side, of the test (see Figs. 15, 16, 18, 19). test Shell, or housing, in which the animal lives. tooth A protuberance or projection within the aperture (see Figs. 12, 13, 14). triloculine coiling Coiling in which three chambers constitute a whorl; each chamber is half a coil long, and the chambers are added at intervals of 120° around the axis of coiling so that two chambers are visible from one side and three from the opposite side (see Fig. 8). triserial Chambers arranged in three adjacent rows (see Fig. 6). trochoid; trochospiral (or rotaline) coiling Coiling in a rising spire rather than a plane (see Figs. 3a-c, 20). truncate As if cut off. umbilical side The side of the test on which only the final whorl is visible (see Fig. 3b). umbilicus; umbilical The central area (usually a depression) where the sutures that separate the chambers come together (see Figs. 2a, 3b). uniserial Chambers arranged in a single row (see Fig. 4). valvelike tooth A broad plate that partly blocks the aperture (see Fig. 14). vasiglobuline aperture Terminal aperture characterized by a ring of small openings (see Fig. 19). wall Rigid or flexible material, porous or nonporous, that surrounds the living animal. whorl (or coil) A ring of chambers or, in a single-chambered test, a complete revolution of the single chamber (see Figs. 1, 2a, 3a, 11a, b, 21, 22). KEY TO SPECIES OF FORAMINIFERA 1 Test agglutinated 2 1 Test secreted 52 2 (J) Test is single-chambered 3 2 (/) Test has more than one chamber 19 3 (2) Test is attached 4 3 (2) Test is not attached 10 5 4 (J) Test has no aperture 5 4 (i) Test has one or more apertures 6 X75 5 (4) Wall is thick, rigid, and fine grained; shape is hemispherical. Diameter 0.30-0.50 mm. a. Oblique view; b, basal view of detached specimen Hemisphaerammina bradyi X10 r 5 (4) Wall is th^n, flexible, coarse grained; shape is variable, low, spreading. A real extent is variable, usually >1 mm aaoss; wall thickness about 0.02 mm. a. Top view; b, side view Iridia diaphana z\ 6 {4) Test is a slender tube 6 (4) Test is hemispherical 7 (6) Test consists of a slender winding tube of uniform width, normally encrusted upon shell fragments, pebbles, or other Foraminifera. Diameter of tube about 0.10 mm. (Specimen attached to a fragment of Rhabdammina.) Tolypammina vagans XIO (6) Test is branching and slender, growing upward from an attached base. Normally observed as fragments. Diameter of tube 0.08-0. 10 mm Dendrophrya arborescens ((5) Test is flexible; apertures are at the ends of short stalks, usually one at each end of the slightly elongate hemisphere; wall is fine grained, roughened, orange in color. Diameter exclusive of apertural stalks 0.50-0.70 mm. a, Top view; b, side view showing apertural stalks; c, basal view of detached specimen showing filamentous floor of test Thurammina? limnetis (6) Test is rigid 9 X15 9 {S) Apertures are indistinct, consisting of low irregular openings between the test and its support; wall is fine grained. Diameter exclusive of apertural exten- sions 0.50-2.50 mm. a. Top view of specimen attached to a fragment of Rhabdammina; b, side view Tholosina bulla (8) Apertures are distinct, consisting of several radiating tubes that are also attached to the supporting object. Diameter exclusive of apertural tubes 0.20-0.70 mm. Top view Tholosina vesicularis X40 X25 10 (3) Test is spherical, lacks an aperture; wall is thick, consisting of matted sponge spicules. Diameter 0.70-1 .00 mm. Broken section Crithionina pisum 10 (i) Test has one or more apertures 1 1 1 1 (10) Test has one aperture 12 1 1 (JCf) Test has two or more apertures 13 12 (11) Aperture is simple 14 12 (H) Aperture is at the end of a neck 15 13 (//) Test is an elongate tube open at both ends 17 13 (11) Test is generally globular 18 14 (12) Aperture is usually obscured by mud filling; wall is thin, rigid, consisting of a single layer of large sand grains neatly fitted together. Diameter 0.60-1.00 mm. a. Exterior; b, broken section Psammosphaera fusca X40 X50 14 (12) Test is elongate subspherical; aperture is a round opening; wall is flexible, outer layer consisting of fine sand. Diameter 0.40-0.50 mm. a, Side view; b, top view Saccamminal sp. 15 (12) Wall is coarsely agglutinated 1^ 8 15 (J 2) Wall is finely agglutinated, thin, test consists of a tapering tube; surface fine grained, creased by transverse wrinkles. Length 0.35-0.55 mm. a, Exterior; b, top view; c, section Hippocrepina indivisa xioo 16 (75) Neck is distinct from the main body of the test; wail consists of a mixture of fine and coarse grains. Length 0.42-0.65 mm Saccammina difflugiformis forma typica 16 (15) Neck tapers to the apertural opening; wall consists of relatively large grains, smoothly finished by the addition of finer grains in the interstices. Length 0.60- 0.80 mm Saccammina difflugiformis forma atlantica X50 X50 1 7 (13) Test is rigid, relatively large; wall thin, consists of a mixture of coarse and fine sand grains, both exterior and interior surfaces rough. Length indeterminate because speci- mens are fragmentary; diameter about 0.80 mm Rhabdamminal sp. X20 17 (13) Test is collapsible; wall consists mostly of mud with the addition of minor amounts of coarse grains or shell fragments. Length as much as 3 mm or more; diameter 0.4 mm or ™ore Pelosina cylindrica X25 18 (13) Apertures are at the ends of protruding nipples; wall is thin, very fine grained, parchmentlike. Diameter about 1 mm Thurammina papiltata 18 (13) Apertures are at the ends of radiating arms; test has a discoid center; wall is coarse and friable. Diameter exclusive of arms 2-4 mm Astrorhiza limicola 19 (2) Test consists of two chambers — a spherical initial chamber and a long undivided second chamber; coiling is planispiral; wall is fine grained; color reddish or yellow- ish brown. Diameter about 0.30 mm Ammodiscus minutissimus X75 1 9 (2) Test consists of more than two chambers 20 20 (19) Chambers, in the later part of the test, are arranged in a row or rows 21 20 (19) Chambers are arranged in a coil 35 21 (20) Test is uniserial 22 21 (20) Test is multiserial 30 22 (21) Test is not coiled at the beginning , 22 (21) Test has a coiled beginning .23 .26 23 (22) Test is flexible, minute, later chambers overhanging earlier ones. Length 0.30-0.55 mm Reophax scottii 10 23 (22) Rigid test 24 24 (23) Test is compressed; chambers are broader than high. Length 0.35-0.42 mm. a, Side view; ra a b, top view Reophax arcticus 24 {23) Test is circular in transverse section; wall is rough owing to relatively large sand grains 25 X75 25 (24) The last several chambers are nearly equal in size. Length 0.65-0.90 mm Reophax scorpiurus X25 25 (24) Final chamber makes up most of the test. Length 1 .3-1.7 mm Reophax curtus 26 (22) Test is composed entirely of coiled chambers; aperture is a transverse slit in the middle of the apertural face; pores at the base of the coil constitute sup- plementary apertures; wall is finely arenaceous, smoothly finished. Length about 0.4 mm. a, Side view; b, edge view Ammoastuta inepta X100 26 (22) Test has an initial coil and an uncoiled part 27 11 27 (26) Test is only partly uncoiled, i.e., the later chambers reach back toward the initial coil; test is compressed throughout; wall is coarsely arenaceous. Length as much as 1.90 mm, breadth 0.55-0.70 mm, thickness 0.40-0.50 mm Ammotium cassis X60 27 (26) Test has a coiled initial stage followed by a straight uniserial part 28 XlOO 28 (27) Test is cylindrical; uniserial chambers are low; sutures are horizontal and inconspicuous. Length 0.30-0.35 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Aminobaculites exiguus 28 (27) Test is compressed; apertural end is contracted 29 29 (28) Coiled part constitutes the major part of the test; sutures indistinct, not deeply depressed. Length as much as 1.00 mm, width of coiled part about 0.60 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Ammobaculites dilatatus X40 29 (2S) Coiled part constitutes a minor part of the test; sutures distinct, slanting, depressed. Length 0.50-0.70 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Ammobaculites crassus 12 ^ X60 X120 30 (21) Multiserial part is inconspicuous; test is minute, slender, initial end sharply tapering. Length about 0.42 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Pseudoclavulina gracilis 30 (21) Multiserial part makes up most of the test 31 X60 3 1 (30) Test is triserial; wall is finely arenaceous, smoothly finished, usually orange. Length 0.40- 0.70 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Eggerella advena 31 (30) Test is biserial .32 32 (31) Test has a conspicuous coil at its beginning 32 (31) Test is tapering from its initial point .33 .34 13 33 (32) Test is minute, narrow but thick, of nearly equal breadth throughout. Length about 0.30 mm Spiroplectammina biformis X150 X120 33 (32) Test is compressed, somewhat tapering. Length about 0.42 mm Spiroplectammina typica X75 34 (32) Test is thick; chambers are in a plane, sutures are generally horizontal. Length 0.40- ^3 0.50 mm Textularia earlandi 34 (32) Test is minute, delicate, compressed; chambers are in a warped plane, as if the test were twisted around its elongate axis; sutures generally slanting at about 45°. Length about 0.30 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Textularia torquata 35 (20) Coiling is milioline; wall is finely arenaceous, smoothly finished, siliceous, hence insoluble in hydrochloric acid 36 35 (20) Coiling is spiral 37 14 36 (35) Test is relatively large and robust. Length 0.60-0.80 mm. a, b. Opposite sides; c, top view Miliamminafusca X100 36 {35) Test is relatively small, slender, and elongate. Length 0.32-0.40 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Miliammina petila 37 (35) Spiral coiling is approximately in a plane (planispiral) and involute 38 37 (35) Spiral coiling is trochoid (rotaline) and evolute on one side 42 38 (37) Aperture is at the base of the final chamber 39 iS (37) Aperture is within the face of the final chamber 41 39 (38) Coiling is slightly asymmetrical; test is subglobular; aperture is low and inconspicuous, at one side of the aperlural face. Diameter 0.25-0.45 mm. a. Side view; b, front view Adercotryma glomeratum X75 39 (38) Coiling is strictly planispiral 40 15 40 (39) Chambers are not inflated; umbilicus is not well developed; wall is finely arenaceous, smooth, glossy. Diameter 0.25-0.40 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Haplophragmoides hancocki XlOO 40 (39) Chambers are few (7 or less), inflated; umbilicus is well developed; wall is coarsely arenaceous and smoothly finished. Diameter 0.25- 0.30 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Haplophragmoides bonplandi X120 41 (38) Test is large, robust, coarse surfaced, usually orange. Diameter 0.90-1.30 mm; thickness about 0.50 mm. a, Side view; b, edge view Cribrostomoides crassimargo 41 (38) Test is delicate, smooth surfaced. Diameter 0.45-0.60 mm. a, Side view; b, edge view Cribrostomoides jeffreysii X75 42 (37) Aperture is simple. . 42 (37) Aperture is complex .43 .50 43 (42) Fine grained, smooth surfaced 43 (42) Medium to coarse grained ... . .44 .47 16 44 (43) Of norma] to large size .- ■.....•.,..... V: .^ 44 (43) Minute, scaielike ....:.. 46 X65 45 (44) Early chambers are usually accentuated by a dark filling beneath the wall surface; sutures are distinct, incised on the umbilical side; umbilicus is deep and open. Diameter 0.50-0.80 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Trochammina injlata 45 (44) Test is flexible, collapses when dry. Diameter 0.25-0.35 mm. a, Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Trochammina macrescens X200 46 (44) Whorls are many and narrow; umbilical surface is finer grained than spiral surface. Diameter 0.15-0.22 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Trochammina ochracea 46 (44) Whorls are few and wide. Diameter 0.20-0.40 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view . . Trochammina squamata X120 17 47 {43) Chambers are few (3 or 4); test is relatively thick 48 47 (43) Chambers are many (6 or more), not inflated; test is relatively flat 49 X150 48 (47) Test is moderately compressed; chambers are inflated and periphery lobulate. Diameter 0.22-0.25 mm. a, Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Trochammina advena X100 48 (47) Test is compact, subglobular; chambers are not inflated and periphery not lobulate. Diameter 0.30-0.40 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Trochammina compacta 49 (47) Umbilical side is concave, umbili- cus is open; chambers are many, not much increasing in size as added. Diameter 0.30-0.55 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Trochammina rolaliformis X100 49 (47) Final chamber is extended as a bulging lobe covering the umbilical area; whorls are few; chambers increase rapidly in size as added. Diameter 0.40-0.50 mm. a, Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Trochammina nana 18 50 (42) Apertures are sutural openings on the concave umbilical side, plus an open- ing in the final chamber at the end of the umbilical lobe. Diameter 0.35-0.45 mm. a, Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Tiphotrocha comprimata 50 (42) Apertures are pores on the face of the final chamber .51 51 (50) Primary aperture is equatorial rather than umbilical. Diameter 0.30-0.35 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbihcal view; c, edge view Jadammina polystoma XlOO 51 (50) Primary aperture is a slit extending into the apertural face; wall is very finely arenaceous, smooth, glossy. Diameter 0.32-0.35 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Arenoparretia mexicana X100 52 (/) Test is pseudochitinous; wall is flexible, collapses when dry; shape is ovoid, with an inner and outer collar surrounding the apertural opening. % / Y i n n Diameter 0.1 6-0.45 mm Allogromia laticollaris ^- ^ A I 00 52 (J) Test is calcareous 53 53 (52) Wall is imperforate and opaque, porcellaneous, usually milky white 54 53 (52) Wall is perforate and glassy or translucent 68 54 (53) Coiling is planispiral 55 54 (S3) Coiling is milioline 56 19 55 {54) Test is relatively small with few whorls of equal size; wall is translucent and glossy. Diameter 0.20-0.22 mm. a, Side view; b, edge view Cornuspira planorbis X150 55 (54) Test is relatively large with many overlapping whorls; wall is opaque. Diameter 1 .00 mm or larger, a, Side view; b, edge view Cornuspira involvens 56 (54) Two chambers only are visible from the exterior; test is subglobular; aperture is large, rounded, with a low bifid tooth. Length 0.40-0.60 mm. a, Front view; b, side view; c, top view Pyrgo subsphaerica X60 56 (54) More than two chambers are visible from the exterior 57 57 (56) Four chambers are visible from one side and three from the other (quinqueloculine) 57 (56) Three chambers are visible from one side and two from the other (triloculine) .58 .64 58 (57) Aperture lacks a tooth; test is flattened, nearly circular in outline, rounded on the periphery. Length 0.30-0.55 mm. a, b. Opposite sides; c, top view Pateoris hauerinoides X60 58 (57) Aperture has a tooth 59 20 X40 59 (58) Wall is coated with sand grains; periphery is rounded. Length 0.80-1 . 15 mm. a, b, Opposite sides; c, top view Quinqueloculina fhgida 59 (58) Wall is smooth or striate 60 60 (59) Test is angled on the periphery . . 60 (59) Test is rounded on the periphery . .61 .62 61 (60) Periphery is sharply angled; test is short and broad, lacks an apertural neck. Length 0.55-0.75 mm. a, b, Opposite sides; c, top view Quinqueloculina auberiana 61 (60) Periphery is truncate; test is bulky; in some specimens wall is ornamented by fine costae. Length 0.55-1.00 mm. a, b, Opposite sides; c, top view Quinqueloculina bicornis 21 62 {60) Test is thin-walled, highly variable in shape, ovate or elongate, smooth or costate; the final chamber overhangs the widely open aperture in a hoodlike fashion, the apertural tooth is generally low. Length 0.40-0.50 mm. a, b, Oppo- site sides; c, top view Quinqueloculina lata 62 (60) Test is robust, rounded quadrangular in outline, rounded on the periphery, has a slightly protruding neck .63 63 (62) Wall is smooth and polished. Characteristic of surf- washed shores. Length 0.50-0.85 mm. a, b. Opposite sides; c, top view Quinqueloculina seminulum forma typica X75 63 (62) Wall is costate. Characteristic of bays and inlets. Length 0.40-0.75 mm. a, b. Opposite sides Quinqueloculina seminulum {oTmnjugosa 22 64 (57) Aperture is partly blocked by a valvelike plate; test is thick, nearly circular in outline; periphery rounded. Length 0.35-0.65 mm. a, b. Opposite sides; c, top view Miliolinella subrotunda X50 64 (57) Aperture has a tooth 65 '*- 65 (64) Test is small, elongate and slender, rounded at base and top and on the periphery. Length 0.20-0.35 mm. a, b. Opposite sides; c, top view Triloculina obtonga 65 (64) Test is compact 66 66 (65) Test is triangular in section, rounded on the periphery, truncate at the apertural end. Length 0.32-0.40 mm. a. Front view; b, top view Triloculina trigonula 66 (65) Test is compressed 67 23 67 (66) Apertural tooth is long, broader at free end than at base; test is nearly circular in outline. Length 0.55-0.80 mm. a, Side view; b, top view Triloculina concisa 67 (66) Apertural tooth is short and bifid; test is longer than broad; the final chamber overhangs the widely open aperture in a hoodlike fashion. Length 0.35-0.45 mm. a, Side view; b, top view Triloculina brevidenlala 68 (53) Test is single chambered 68 (53) Test has more than one chamber . .69 .77 69 (68) Test is a simple sac 69 (68) Saclike test possesses an internal tube (observable by use of clarifying oil and transmitted light) .70 .73 70 (69) Wall is unornamented 70 (69) Wall is ornamented .71 .72 71 (70) Sac is rounded; wall is smooth. Length about 0.35 mm Lagena laevis 24 X75 71 (70) Sac is elongate, has an apical spine; neck is typically set at a slight angle. Length 0.50-0.55 mm Lagena clavata X75 72 (70) Wall is finely striate; neck is ornamented by concentric rings. Diameter 0.20 mm Lagena striata XlOO yX50 72 (70) Test consists of an elongate tube, closed at one end and swollen in the central part; wall is finely striate. Length > 0.70 mm; diameter 0.1 2-0. 18 mm Lagena mollis 73 (69) Sac is circular in section ^'* 73 (69) Sac is compressed ^^ w XlOO 74 (73) Sac is unornamented. Length about 0.30 mm; diameter about 0.22 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Oolina globosa 74 (73) Sac is ornamented 75 25 75 (74) Ornamentation consists of a reticulated pattern, in which the cells are in vertical rows. Length about 0.40 mm; diameter about 0.40 mm Oolina melo X50 75 (74) Sac is globular or elongate; ornamentation consists of blunt ribs that end at the base of a thick collar around the apertural end. Length 0.30-0.42 mm; diameter 0.20-0.30 mm. a. Side view; b, oblique upward view of interior of broken specimen; c, side view of a more elongate specimen Oolina borealis 76 (73) Periphery is angled but not keeled; apertural end is protruding. Length 0.25-0.30 mm. a, Front view; b, side view Fissurina laevigata 76 (73) Periphery has a double keel; test outline is neariy circular. Length 0.1 2-0. 1 8 mm. a, Front view; b, edge view; c, top view Fissurina marginala 77 (68) Chambers are in multiple rows 78 77 (68) Chambers are in a single row 96 26 78 (77) Test is attached, consisting of a laterally affixed polymorphinid surrounded by a broad flange by which it is cemented to its shell or rock support; apertures are a few small mounded pores on the peripheral flange. Diameter 0.45-0.75 mm. Illustrated specimen is attached to shell fragment Webbinella concava 78 (77) Test is not attached 79 79 (75) Aperture is radiate 80 79 (78) Aperture is not radiate 86 X75 80 (79) Test has an internal tube; coiling is sigmoiline; chambers are not inflated. Length about 0.50 mm. a, Side view; b, basal view Laryngosigma williamsoni 80 (79) Test lacks an internal tube 81 81 (80) Test is elongate or flattened; chambers are little overlapping; coiling is biserial 82 8 1 (80) Test is compact and chambers are much overlapping 83 27 X50 82 {81) Chambers are inflated; sutures are depressed. Length 0.70 mm. a, Side view; b, top view Pseudopolymorphina phaleropei 82 {81) Test is relatively large and elongate, compressed; chambers are not inflated. Length 0.60- 1.15 mm. a, b, Opposite sides; c, basal view . Pseudopolymorphina novangliae r 83 {81) Coiling is quinqueloculine; chambers are not inflated, final two composing most of the test. Length 0.30-0.40 mm. a, b, Opposite sides; c, basal view Guttulina lactea 83 {81) Coiling is triloculine 84 28 84 (83) Wall is ornamented by coarse spines by which some specimens may be attached to sand grains or shells; aperture consists of a ring of pores rather than radiating slits. Length 0.50-0.75 mm. a, b, Opposite sides; c, top view; d, basal view Vasiglobulina sp. 84 {83) Wall is smooth 85 85 (84) Test is elongate, broadest nejir the middle, basal and apertural ends pointed; sutures are depressed. Length 0.25-0.30 mm. a, b. Opposite sides Globulina glacialis X75 ^ b H 1 /a 85 (84) Test is bag-shaped, broadest near the base; sutures are not depressed. Length 0.32-0.50 mm. a, b. Opposite sides; c, top view Globulina gibba 86 (79) Test is biserial 87 86 {79) Test is triserial or multiserial 92 29 X150 87 {86) Test is twisted around its elongate axis; aperture is comma-shaped; sutures are distinct and depressed. Length 0.20-0.32 mm. a, Side view; b, top view Fursenkoinafusifomtis 87 {86) Plane of the test is flat 88 88 {87) Suture lines are simple 89 88 {87) Suture lines are slightly crenulated, i.e., the walls of the later chambers overlap the earlier chambers 91 X75 89 {88) Periphery is acute; test is relatively large, broadly tapering and in some specimens keeled, ornamented with 2-4 conspicuous basal costae. Length about 0.70 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Brizalina subaenariensis 89 {88) Periphery is rounded 90 (^ 90 {89) Ornamented with barely visible costae, test is relatively small, narrowly tapering. Length about 0.35 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Brizalina slriatula 30 X120 90 (89) Unornamented, sutures are slanting, test thick, slightly twisted; fine wall perforations are present only over the lower part of each chamber, leaving the upper part clear. Length about 0.35 mm. a, b, Side views 90° apart; c. Side view as seen by transmitted light Brizalina pseudopunctata X150 91 (90) Wall is smooth, coarsely perforate. Length 0.35-0.40 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Bolivina variabilis X120 91 (90) Wall is rugose. Length 0.30-0.40 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Bolivina pseudoplicata 92 (86) Test is multiserial, small, slender, ovate; as many as 10 chambers in one whorl; aperture is relatively large. Length 0. 18 mm Buliminella elegantissima 92 (86) Test is triserial 31 93 (92) Chambers are strongly overhanging, not inflated, rimmed by short, sharp, downward-extending spines. Length 0.30-0.45 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Bulimina marginata X100 93 (92) Aperture is terminal 94 94 (93) Test is roughly triangular in section; wall is ornamented by fine low costae that are not continuous across the sutures. Length 0.35-0.55 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Angulogerina angulosa XlOO 94 (93) Test is roughly circular in section 95 X50 95 (94) Terminal aperture contains a large, projecting curved tooth; test is large, elongate, subglobular; wall is glassy, transparent; chambers are inflated, later ones nearly enclos- ing earlier ones. Length 0.75-0.95 mm. a. Side view; b, top view Globobulimina auriculata 32 95 (94) Terminal aperture lacks a protruding tooth and is surrounded by a phialine lip; test becomes biserial toward the apertural end; wall is finely hispid. Length about 0.25 mm. a, Side view; b, top view Hopkinsina atlantica XI20 X50 96 (77) Test is not coiled (uniserial), long axis of the test is slightly arcuate; chambers are Httle inflated; aperture is radiate, slightly protruding. Length about 1 .00 mm Denialina communis 96 (77) Testiscoiled 97 97 (96) Aperture is radiate and situated at the periphery; chambers are few, not inflated; sutures are not depressed. Length 0.45-0.75 mm. a, ^'■~-~_\^.^'^^^ \ / b Side view; b, edge view Lenticulina occidentalis X60 97 (96) Aperture is not radiate 98 98 (97) Coiling is planispiral and hence the same on both sides 99 98 (97) Coiling is trochoid and hence different on the two sides 115 99 (98) CoUed chambers are in a single row 100 99 (98) Coiled chambers are in a double row 113 100 (99) Sutures are simple 101 100 (99) Sutures are crossed by septal bridges 105 101 (]00) Coiling is tight 102 101 (100) Coiling is expanding 103 33 102 (lOI) Wall is uncomplicated by surface structures; chambers are slightly inflated, periphery is bluntly rounded; umbilicus is slightly depressed, obscured by fine papillae. Diameter 0.32-0.52 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Haynesina germanica X75 102 {101) Umbilicus is covered by a star pattern of flaps. Diameter 0.30-0.35 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Astrononion gallowayi 103 (101) Test is the same on both sides; chambers increase rapidly in thickness as added. Length 0.40-0.70 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Nonionellina labradorica 103 (101) The two sides of the test are different 104 104 (103) Test has a bulging lobe that covers the umbilicus on one side; chambers are narrow and elongate. Length about 0.22 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbil- ical view; c, edge view Nonionella turgida 104 (103) Test shows early coil on one side, but no V/ I J^^ V /^ ^""^ lobe; umbilicus is papillate. Length 0.32-0.52 ^^'^ X 1 0 0 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Pseudononion atlanticum 105 (100) Periphery is angled and limbate 106 105 (100) Periphery is rounded 107 34 X50 106 (105) Surface is smooth; umbilicus has one or more plugs. Diameter 0.25- 0.50 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Elphidium advena 106 (105) Surface looks sugary; umbilicus lacks plugs. Diameter 0.40-0.60 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Elphidium margaritaceum X50 X150 107 {105) Wall is coarsely porous and rugose. Diameter 0.20-0.32 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Elphidium gunteri 107 (105) Wall is finely perforate and smooth 108 108 (107) Septal bridges are regular 109 X75 108 (107) Septal bridges are irregular; sutures are crenulated, especially so toward the umbilicus; test is thickest through the umbilical area. Diameter 0.40-0.75 mm. a, Side view; b, edge view Elphidium clavatum 35 X75 109 (108) Sutures look beaded; umbilicus is occupied by a large and slightly raised plug. Diameter 0.45-0.60 nun. Variant forms illustrated: a, b, side and edge views of specimen with prominent umbilical plug; c, d, side and edge views of specimen with depressed and granular umbilical area Elphidium galvestonense 109 {108) Sutures look pitted; umbilicus is flush or slightly depressed 1 10 1 10 (109) Sutures and septal bridges are distinct Ill 1 10 (109) Septal bridges are inconspicuous 112 1 1 1 (110) Sutures are flush; septal bridges are short and clearly visible. Diameter 0.22-0.32 mm. a, Side view; b, edge view Elphidium incertum 111 (110) Sutures and umbilicus are slightly excavated; septal bridges are short compared with width of chambers. Diameter 0.50-0.60 mm. a, Side view; b, edge view Elphidium excavatum 112 (11(J) Sutures are simple, moderately depressed. Diameter 0.45-0.75 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Elphidium bartletti X75 X80 36 112 (110) Sutures are bordered by a wide opaque band of micropapillae. Diameter 0.40-0.60 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Elphidium frigidum X100 113 (99) Periphery is angled; aperture is comma-shaped; ahernating chambers (as seen from either side) are nearly equal in size. Diameter 0.25-0.35 mm. a. Side view; b, edge view Cassidulina norcrossi 1 13 (99) Periphery is rounded; alternating chambers (as seen from either side) are distinctly unequal in size 114 X60 114 (]J3) Test is large, thick. Diameter 0.32-0.45 mm. a, b, Opposite views; c, edge view Cassidulina algida 114 (113) Test is small, compressed. Diameter 0.15-0.20 mm. a, b. Opposite views; c, edge view Cassidulina islandica minuta X175 1 15 (98) Coiled side is convex 115 (98) Coiled side is flat; wall is coarsely porous .116 .128 37 X150 116 (//5) Outline of the test is essentially circular; periphery is sharp; chambers are obscured by incomplete transverse septa that result in a reticulated appearance of the spiral surface and a narrow fluting around the outer rim of the umbilical surface. Diameter 0.18-0.25 mm. a, Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Patellina corrugala 1 16 (115) Outline of the test is not circular, but is notched at the final chamber 117 117 (116) Test wall is distinctly porous . 117 {116) Test wall is finely porous ... . .118 .119 118 (117) Umbilical (flat) side is covered by spongelike overgrowth. Diameter 0.25-0.50 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edgeview "Discorbis" aguayoi X50 118 (117) Umbilical (flat) side is not obscured; living specimens are normally attached; umbilical surface \^^ \^ b r^ y ^ ~i^ y g is unornamented; umbilical sutures are irregular X75 toward their inner ends. Diameter 0.32-0.60 mm. a, Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Rosalina floridana 119 (117) Test has an umbilical plug^ 120 1 19 (117) Test lacks an umbilical plug 121 'Absence of umbilical plug in some specimens of a species that is characterized by an umbilical plug may be due to breakage and in other specimens, due to environmental influences. For example, see the variant forms of Ammonia beccarii. 38 X50 120 UI9) Test is rounded on the periphery. According to its environment, the species is highly variable in size, thickness, number of chambers, prominence or absence of umbilical plug, presence or absence of limbation or other ornamentation of sutures, a, b, c, Spiral, umbilical, and edge views of A. beccarii lepida, characteristic of quiet, brackish water; diameter 0.25-0.30 mm. d, e, f. Spiral, umbilical, and edge views of the form of A. beccarii that is characteristic of bays and inlets; diameter 0.22-0.40 mm. g, h, i. Spiral, um- bilical, and edge views of the form of A. beccarii that is characteristic of surf- washed coasts; diameter 0.40-0.70 mm Ammonia beccarii (variant forms) 120 (7/9) Test is angled and keeled on the periphery; umbilical plug is flat. Diameter about 0.35 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view Gavelinopsis praegeri 39 121 {119) Test has supplementary chambers; size is minute. Diameter about 0.20 mm. a. Spiral view; b, umbilical view; c, edge view , Eoeponidella pulchella X175 121 (/yP) Test laci;ep/a (Cushman and McCulloch, 1939). Brackish, estuarine. Ammohaculiies crassus WaTTen, 1957. Ellison and Nichols 1970. Brackish, estuarine. Virginia and Maryland. A mmobaculites dilatalus Cushman and Bronnimann, 1948. Brackish, estuarine. Amwobaculites exiguus Cushman and Bronnimann, 1948. Brackish, estuarine. Virginia to Cape Cod. Ammodiscus minulissimus Cushman and McCulloch, 1939. Continental shelf. Ammonia beccarii (Linne, 1758). Bays, inlets, littoral zone of protected coasts. Ammonia beccarii (Linne) lepida (Cushman, 1926). Quiet and brackish water. Ammonia beccarii (Linne) variant. Littoral zone of e.xposed coasts. Ammotium cassis (Parker, 1870)(in Dawson 1870). Brackish inlets, surface of submerged bogs, quiet bays. Angulogerina annulosa (Williamson, 1858). Continental shelf. Arenoparrella we.v/co/jo (Kornfeld, 1931). Brackish inlets, surface of submerged bogs. Virginia to Cape Cod. Aslrononion gallowayi Loeblich and Tappan, 1953. Continental shelf. Astrorhiza limicola Sandahl, 1857. Continental shelf. Balivina pseudoplicata Heron-.Mlen and Earland, 1930. Littoral zone and continental shelf. Bolivina variabilis (Williamson, 1858). Littoral zone and continental shelf. Brizalina pseiidopunciala (Hoglund. 1947). Contineniai shelf. Brizalina strialula (Cushman. 1922). (See reference 1922c.) Continental shelf. Brizalina subaenariensis (Cushman, 1922). (See reference 1922a.) Continental shelf. Buccella frigida (Cushman, 1922). (See reference 1922b.) An- dersen 1952. Brackish inlets and littoral zone. New York northward and as a fossil at least as far south as Maryland. Buccella sp. Continental shelf. Bulimina marginata d'Orbigny, 1826. Continental shelf. Buliminella elegantissima (d'Orbigny, 1839). (See reference 1839a.) Littoral zone and continental shelf. Cassidulina algida Cushman, 1944. Continental shelf. Georges Bank northward. Cassidulina islandica minuta Ndrvang, 1945. Continental shelf. Georges Bank northward. Cassidulina norcrossi Cushman, 1933. Continental shelf. Cibicides lobatulus (Walker and Jacob, 1798), in Kanmacher 1798. Littoral zone and continental shelf. Cornuspira involvens (Reuss, 1850). Continental shelf. Cornuspira planorbis Schultz, 1854. Brackish, estuarine, surface of submerged bogs, continental shelf Cribrostomoides crassimargo (Norman, 1892). Loeblich and Tappan 1953. Continental shelf. Cribrostomoides jeffreysii (Williamson, 1858). Loeblich and Tappan 1953. Continental shelf. Cape Cod northward. Crithionina pisum Got: s, 1896. Continental shelf. Dendrophrya arborescens (Norman, 1881) (in Brady 1881b). Continental shelf. Maine. Dentalina communis d'Orbigny, 1826. Continental shelf. "Discorbis" aguayoi Bermijdez, 1935. Brackish, estuarine. Eggerella advena (Cushman, 1922). (See reference 1922b.) Loeblich and Tappan 1953. Brackish, estuarine, continental shelf. Elphidium advena (Cushman, 1922) (See reference 1922c.) Littoral zone, bays, inlets, continental shelf. Rare north of Maryland. Elphidium bartleiti Cushman, 1933. Continental shelf. Maine. Elphidium clavatum Cushman, 1930. Loeblich and Tappan 1953, Ellison and Nichols 1970. Littoral zone of open coasts, continental shelf. Elphidium excavalum (Terquem, 1875). Brackish, estuarine, continental shelf. Elphidium frigidum (Cushman, 1933). Brackish, estuarine, continental shelf. Elphidium galvestonense Kornfeld, 1931. Brackish inlets. Cape Cod southward. Elphidium gunleri Co\e, 1931. Brackish inlets. Cape Cod southward. Elphidium incertum (Williamson, 1858). Brackish, estuarine, continental shelf. Elphidium margaritaceum Cushman, 1930. Brackish, estuarine, continental shelf. Eoeponidella pulchella (Parker, 1952). (See reference 1952a.) Continental shelf. New Hampshire and North Carolina. Epistominella viirea Parker, 1953; in Parker et al. 1953. Continental shelf. Off New Jersey. Fissurina laevigata Reuss, 1850. Littoral zone of open coasts, bays having good circulation, continental shelf. 43 Fissurina marginata Seguenza, 1 862. Littoral zone, continental shelf. Fursenkoina fusiformis (Williamson, 1858). Continental shelf. Gavelinopsis praegeri (\\evon-M\tr\ and Earland, 1913). Continental shelf. Off New Jersey. Glabratelta wrighlii (Brady, 1881). (See reference 1881b.) Continental shelf. Glabratellina lauriei (Heron-Allen and Earland, 1924). Seiglie and Bermudez 1965 Littoral zone protected coasts, bays, inlets, surface of sub- merged bogs. Globobulimina auriculala (Bailey, 1851). Continental shelf. Globulina gibba d'Orhigny, 1826. Continental shelf. Globulina glacialis Cushman and Ozawa, 1930. Continental shelf. Cape Cod northward. Guttulina lactea {Wa\keT and Jacob, 1798); in Kanmacher 1798. Cushman and Ozawa 1930. Continental shelf, cape Cod southward. Hanzawaia concentrica {Cushman, 1918). (See reference 1918a.) Littoral zone, continental shelf. Cape Cod southward. Haplophragmoides bonplandi Todd and Bronnimann, 1957. Estuarine and littoral zones. Haplophragmoides hancocki Cushman and McCulloch, 1939. Brackish, estuarine, surface of submerged bogs, bays having good circulation. Haynesina germanica (Ehrenberg, 1840), Ehrenberg 1841. Ban- ner and Culver 1978. Brackish and littoral zones, bays and inlets. Helenina anderseni (Warren, 1957). Brackish and estuarine zones. Martha's Vineyard and Cape Cod. Heinisphaerammina bradyi Loeblich and Tappan, 1957. Continental shelf. Hippocrepina indivisa Parker, 1870; in Dawson 1870. Continental shelf. Maine. Hopkinsina atlantica Cushman, 1944. Inner part of continental shelf. Vineyard Sound, Buzzards Bay, Narragansett Bay, Gardiners Bay, and Long Island Sound. Iridia diaphana Heron-Allen and Earland, 1914. Brackish, estuarine, and littoral zone. Martha's Vineyard. Jadammina polystoma Bartensiein and Brand, 1938. Brackish, estuarine. Martha's Vineyard and Cape Cod. Lagena clavala (d'Orbigny, 1846). Continental shelf. Lagena laevis (Monlagu, 1803). Littoral zone of open coasts, continental shelf. Lagena mollis Cushman, 1944. Inner part of continental shelf. Maine and Rhode Island. Lagena striata (d'Orbigny, 1839). (See reference 1839a.) Littoral zone of open coasts and continental shelf. Laryngosigma williamsoni (Terquem, 1878). Loeblich and Tappan 1953. Continental shelf. Lenticulina occidentalis (Cushman, 1923). Continental shelf, more abundant beyond 50 m depth. Miliammina fusca (Brady, 1870). Ellison and Nichols 1970. Brackish, estuarine, bays, inlets. Miliammina pet Ha Saunders, 1958. Estuarine. Miliolinella subrotunda (Montagu, 1803). Littoral zone, bays, inlets, continental shelf. Nonionella turgida (Williamson, 1858). Continental shelf. Nonionellina labradorica (Dawson, 1860). Continental shelf. North of Cape Cod. Oolina borealis Loeblich and Tappan, 1954. Loeblich and Tappan 1953. Continental shelf. North of Cape Cod. Oolina globosa (Momapi, 1803). Continental shelf. Maine and Rhode Island. Oolina melo d'Orbigny, 1839. (See reference 1839a.) Continental shelf. Patellina corrugata Williamson, 1858. Littoral zone of protected coasts, continental shelf. Pateoris hauerinoides (Rhumbler, 1936). Loeblich and Tappan 1953. Littoral zone, bays, inlets, continental shelf. Pelosina cylindrica Brady, 1884. Littoral zone and continental shelf. Planorbulina acervalis Brady, 1884. Littoral zone of open coasts, continental shelf. Planidina mera Cushman, 1944. Littoral zone of open coasts, continental shelf. Poroeponides lateralis (Terquem, 1878). Littoral zone and inner part of continental shelf, south of Cape Cod. Psammosphaera fusca Schulze, 1875. Continental shelf. Pseudoclavulina gracilis Cushman and Bronnimann, 1948. Brackish, estuarine. Cape Cod and southward. Pseudononion atlanlicum (Cushman, 1947). Littoral zone of open coasts, continental shelf. Cape Cod and southward. Pseudopolymorphina novangliae (Cushman, 1923). Cushman and Ozawa 1930. Littoral zone, bays, inlets, continental shelf. Pseudopolymorphina phaleropei Cushman and Ozawa 1930. Off Woods Hole, Mass. (the only record). Pyrgo subsphaerica (d'Orbigny, 1839). (See reference 1839b.) Littoral zone, bays, inlets, continental shelf. Quinqueloculina auberiana d'Orbigny, 1839. (See reference 1839b.) Le Calvez 1977. Littoral zone of open coasts. Martha's Vineyard, Mass. Quinqueloculina bicornis (Walker and Jacob, 1798); in Kan- macher 1798. Cushman 1929. Littoral zone of open coasts, continental shelf, south of Cape Cod. Quinqueloculina frigida Parker, 1952. (See reference 1952a.) Continental shelf. New Hampshire and Maine. Quinqueloculina lata Terquem, 1876. Brackish, estuarine, and littoral zones, bays, inlets, conti- nental shelf. Quinqueloculina seminulum forma typica (Linne, 1758). Littoral zone of open coasts, bays having good circulation, continental shelf. Quinqueloculina seminulum forma jugosa Cushman, 1944. Littoral zone, bays, inlets. South of Cape Cod. Reophax arciicus Brady, 1881. (See reference 1881b.) Continental shelf. 44 Reophax curtus Cushman, 1920. Continental shelf. Cape Cod northward. Reophax scorpiurus Montfort, 1808. Continental shelf. Reophax scoitii Chaster, 1892. Continental shelf. Rhabdarriminal sp. Continental shelf. Cape Cod Bay and Maine. Rosalina floridana (Cushman, 1922.) (See reference 1922c.) Littoral zone, bays, inlets, continental shelf. Saccammina difflugiformis forma typica (Brady, 1879). Continental shelf. Saccammina difflugiformis forma atlaniica (Cushman, 1944). Continental shelf. Saccammina! sp. Brackish, estuarine. Maine and Martha's Vineyard. Spiroplectammina biformis (Parker and Jones, 1865). Continental shelf. Spiroplectammina typica LacroLx, 1931. Continental shelf. New Hampshire. Textularia earlandi Parker, 1952, in Phleger 1952. Brackish and estuarine zones, quiet bays, continental shelf. Textularia torquata Parker, 1952. (See reference 1952a.) Continental shelf. Cape Cod northward. Tholosina bulla (Brady, 1881). (See reference 1881a.) Rhumb- ler, 1895. Continental shelf. Tholosina vesicularis (Brady, 1879). Littoral zone, continental shelf. Thurammina papillata Brady, 1 879. Continental shelf. Cape Cod Bay. Thurammina! limnetis Scott and Medioli, 1980. Brackish and estuarine zones. Nova Scotia, Maine, Martha's Vineyard, Virginia. Tiphotrocha comprimata (Cushman and Bronnimann, 1948). Saunders 1957. Brackish and estuarine zones. Tolypammina vagans (Brady, 1879). Rhumbler 1895. Continental shelf. Maine. Triloculina brevidentata Cushman, 1944. Littoral zone of open coasts, bays, inner part of continental shelf. Massachusetts to Maine. Triloculina concisa Cushman, 1944. Littoral zone. Newport, Rhode Island. Triloculina oblonga (Montagu, 1803). Bays, quiet inlets. Triloculina trigonula (Lamarck, 1804). Continental shelf. Trochammina advena Cushman, 1922. (See reference 1922c.) Continental shelf. Trochammina compacia Parker, 1952. (See reference 1952b.) Bays having good circulation, continental shelf. Trochammina inflata (Montagu, 1808). Brackish and estuarine zones, surface of submerged bogs, bays, inlets. Trochammina macrescens Brady, 1870. Brackish and estuarine zones, surface of submerged bogs, bays, inlets. Trochammina nana (Brady, 1881). (See reference 1881b.) Littoral zone of open coasts, continental shelf. Trochammina ochracea (Williamson, 1858). Brackish zone, bays, inlets, continental shelf. Trochammina rotaliformis Wright, 1911, in Heron- Allen and Earland 1911. Balkwill and Wright 1885. Brackish and estuarine zones, bays, inlets, continental shelf. Trochammina squamata Jones and Parker, 1860. Parker 1952a. Bays, inlets, continental shelf. Vasiglobulina sp. Poag, 1969. Poag et al. 1980. Littoral zone of open coasts, continental shelf. Webbinetla concava (Williamson, 1858). Poag et al. 1980. Littoral zone of open coasts, continental shelf. SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY ANDERSEN, H. V. 1952. Buccella, a new genus of the roialid Foraminifera. J. Wash. Acad. Sci. 42:143-151. ARNOLD, Z. M. 1948. A new foraminiferan belonging lo the genus Aflogromia. Trans. Am. Microsc. Soc. 67:231-235. 1974. Field and laboratory techniques for the study of living foraminifera. In R. H. Hedley and C. G. Adams (editors), Foraminifera, Vol. 1, p. 153- 206. Acad. Press, Lond. BAILEY, J. W. 1851. Microscopical examination of soundings made by the U. S. Coast Survey off the Atlantic coast of the U. S. Smithson. Contrib. Knowl. 2(3):4-15. BALKWILL. F. P., and J. WRIGHT. 1885. Report on some recent Foraminifera found off the coast of Dublin and in the Irish Sea. Trans. R. Ir. Acad.. Sci. Ser. 28:317-372. BANNER, F. T., and S. J. CULVER. 1978. Quaternary Haynesina n. gen. and Paleogene Protelphidium Haynes; their morphology, affinities and distribution. J. Foraminiferal Res. 8:177-207. BARTENSTEIN, H., and E. 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A., and I. McCULLOCH. 1939. A report on some arenaceous Foraminifera. Allan Hancock Pac. Exped. 6, 113 p. CUSHMAN. J. A., and Y. OZAWA. 1930. A monograph of the foraminiferal family Polymorphinidae. recent and fossil. Proc. U.S. Natl. Mus. 77(2829). 195 p. DAWSON. G. M. 1870. On Foraminifera from the Gulf and River St. Lawrence. Can. Nat. Q. J. Sci.. New Ser. 5:172-177. DAWSON. J. W. 1860. Notice of Tertiary fossils from Labrador, Maine, etc.. and remarks on the climate of Canada in the newer Pliocene or Pleistocene period. Can. Nat. Geol. 5:188-200. EHRENBERG. C. G. 1840. Line wcitere Erlauterung des OrganLsmus mchrerer in Berlin lebend beobachleter Polylhalamien der Nordsee. Ber, K, Preuss. Akad. Wiss. Berlin 1840:18-23. 1841. Ober noch jelzt zahlreich lebende Thierarten der Kreidebildung und den Organismus der Polythalamien. Abh. K. Akad. Wiss. Berlin. Physik-Math. II. Jahrg. 1839:81-174, ELLISON. R. L.. and M. M. NICHOLS. 1970. Estuarine foraminifera from the Rappahannock River. Virginia. Contrib. Cushman Found. Foraminiferal Res. 21:1-17. GOES. A. 18%. XX. The Foraminifera. In Reports on the dredging operations off the west coast of Central America to the Galapagos, to the west coast of Mexico, and in the Gulf of California, in charge of Alexander Agas,siz, carried out by the U.S. Fish Commission steamer "Albatross" during 1891. Lieut. Commander Z. L. Tanner. U.S.N.. commanding. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool, Harvard Coll. 29:1-103. HERON-ALLEN. E.. and A. EARLAND. 1911. On the recent and fossil Foraminifera of the shore-sands of Selsey Bill. Sus.sex.— VII. Supplement (Addenda el corrigenda). J. R. Microsc. Soc. 1911:298-343. 1913. The Foraminifera of the Clare Island District. Co. Mayo, Ireland. Proc. R. Ir. Acad., Ser. B. 3 1(64): 1-1 88. 1914. The Foraminifera of the Kerimba Archipelago (Portuguese East Africa).— Part 1. Trans. Zool. Soc. Lond. 20:363-390. 1924. The Foraminifera of Lord Howe Island. South Pacific. J. Linn. Soc. Lond.. Zool. 35:599-647. 1930. The Foraminifera of the Plymouth District. II. J. R. Microsc. Soc.. Ser. 3. 50:161-199. HOGLUND, H. 1947. Foraminifera in the Gullmar Fjord and the Skagerak. Zool. Bidr. Uppsala 26. 328 p. JONES. T. R.. and W. K. PARKER. 1860. On the rhizopodal fauna of the Mediterranean, compared with that of the Italian and other Teniary deposits. Q. J. Geol. Soc. 16:292-307. KANMACHER. F. 1798. Adam's Essays on the microscope; the second edition, with considerable additions and improvements. Lond. KORNFELD. M. M. 1931. Recent littoral Foraminifera from Texas and Louisiana. Stanford Univ. Dep. Geol. Contrib. 1:77-101. LACROIX. E. 1931. Microtexture du test des Textularidae. Bull. Inst. Oceanogr. (Monaco) 582. 18 p. LAMARCK. J. B. P. A. M. 1804. Suite des Memoires sur les fossiles des environs de Paris (Explica- tion des planches relatives aux coquilles fossiles des environs de Paris). Ann. Mus. 5:179-188. 237-245, 349-357. LE CALVEZ, Y. 1977. Revision des Foraminiferes de la collection d'Orbigny. 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Testacea Britannica. or natural history of British shells, marine, land, and fresh-water, including the most minute, Lond. 1808. A supplement to the Testacea Britannica. Lond. MONTFORT. D. de. 1808. Conchyliologie systematique et classification methodique des coquilles. vol. 1 Paris. MURRAY. J. W. 1969. Recent foraminifers from the Atlantic continental shelf of the United States. Micropaleontology (N.Y.) 15:40M19, NORMAN. A. M. 1892. Museum Normanianum. Parts 7-8:14-21, Durham. Engl. N0RVANG. A. 1945. Foraminifera. The Zoology of Iceland 2(2). 79 p. d'ORBIGNY. A. D. 1826. Tableau mcthodique de la classe des Cephalopodes. Ann. Sci. Nat. 7:245-314. 1839a. Voyage dans I'Amerique meridionale. Forminiferes 5(5). 86 p. Paris and Strasbourg. 1839b. Foraminiferes. In Ramon de la Sagra. Histoire physique. politique el naturelle de I'ile de Cuba. p. 1-224. Paris. 1846. Foraminiferes fossiles du bassin tertiaire de Vienne (Autriche). |In Fr. and Ger | Gide et Co.. Paris. 312 p. PARKER. F. L. 1948. Foraminifera of the continental shelf from the Gulf of Maine to Maryland. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard Univ. 100:213-241. 1952a. Foraminifera species off Portsmouth. New Hampshire. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard Univ. 106:39M23. 1952b. Foraminiferal distribution in the Long Island Sound-Buzzards Bay area. Bull, Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard Univ. 106:425-473. PARKER. F. L.. and W. D. ATHEARN. 1959. Ecology of marsh Foraminifera in Poponesset Bay. Massachusetts. J. Paleontol. 33:333-343. 46 PARKER, F. L., F. B. PHLEGER, and J. F. PEIRSON. 1953. Ecology of Foraminifera from San Antonio Bay and environs, soulhwesi Texas. Cushman Found. Foraminiferal Res. Spec. Publ. 2, 75 p. PARKER, W. K., and T. R. JONES. 1865. On some Foraminifera from the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans, includmg Davis Straits and Baffin's Bay. Philos. Trans. R. Soc. l.ond. 155:325-441. PHLEGER. F. B. 1952. Foraminifera distribution in some sediment samples from the Canadian and Greenland Arctic. Contrib. Cushman Found. Foramini- feral Res. 3:80-89. PHLEGER, F. B.. and W. R. WALTON. 1950. Ecology of marsh and bay Foraminifera. Barnstable. Mas.s. Am. J. Sci. 248:274-294. POAG. C. W. 1959. Dissolution of molluscan calcite by the attached foraminifer Vasiglobulina, new genus (Vasiglobulininae, new subfamily). Tulane Stud. Geol. Paleontoi. 7:45-71. POAG, C. W., H. J. KNEBEL, and R. TODD. 1980. Distribution of modern benthic foraminifers on the New Jersey Outer Continental Shelf. Mar. Micropaleontol. 5:43-69. REUSS. A. E. 1850. Neue Foraminiferen aus den Schichten des oslerreichischen Tertiarbeckens. Denkschr. Kajs. .Akad. Wiss. Wien. Math.-Naturwiss. CI. 1:365-390. RHUMBLER. L. 1895. Entwurf eines natu'riichen Systems der Thalamophoren. Gesell. Wiss. Gbttingen, maih.-physik Kl.. Nachr. 1:51-98. 1904. Systematische Zusammenstellung der recenten Reliculosa (Nuda + Foraminifera). Arch. Protistenkd. 3:181-294. 1936. Foraminiferen der Kieler Bucht. gesammelt durch A. Remane. II. Teil. [Ammodhicxtlintdae bis emschl. Tcxtiilinidae.) Kiel. Meeresforsch. 1:179-242. RONAl, P. H. 1955. Brackish-water Foraminifera of the New York Bight. Contrib. Cushman Found. Foraminiferal Res. 6:140-149. SANDAHL, O. 1857. Tva nya former af Rhizopodcr. Ofvers. K. Vetensk.-Akad. Fbrh. 14:299-303. SAUNDERS. J. B. 1957. Trochamminidae and certain Lituolidae (Foraminifera) from the recent brackish-water sediments of Trinidad, British West Indies. Smithson. Misc. Collect. 134(5), 16 p. 1958. Recent foraminifera of mangrove swamps and river estuaries and their fossil counterparts in Trinidad. Micropaleontology (N.Y.) 4:79-92. SCHNITKER, D. 1971. Distribution of foraminifera on the North Carolina continental shelf. Tulane Stud. Geol. Paleontoi. 8:169-215. SCHULTZE. M.S. 1854. Ueber den Organismus der Polythalamien (Foraminiferen), nebst Bemerkungen liber die Rhi/opodeii im .AUgemeinen. Leipzig, 68 p. SCHULZE, F. E. 1875. Zoologische Ergebnisse der Nordseefahn, vom 21 Juli bis 9 September 1872. 1. Rhizopoden. Jahresbcr. Komm. Unters. Deutsch. Meerc Kiel Jahre 1872. 1873. Berhn. 11:99-114. SCOTT, D. B., and F. S. MEDIOLI. 1980. Quantitative studies of marsh foraminiferal distributions in Nova Scotia: Implications for sea level studies. Cushman Found. Foraminiferal Res. Spec. Publ. 17:1-58. SEGUENZA. G. 1862. Descrizione dci Foraminifen monotalamici delle mame mioceniche del Distretto di Messina. Part 2. Messina, p. 1-84. SEIGLIE. G. A., and P. J. BERMUDEZ. 1965. Monografia de la familia de foraminiferos Glabratellidae. Geos 12:15-65. SHUPACK. B. 1934. Some Foraminifera from western Long Island and New York Har- bor. Am. Mus. Novit. 737. 12 p. TAPLEY. S. 1%9. Foraminiferal analysis of the Miramichi Estuary. Marit. Sediments 5:30-39. TERQUEM. O. 1875. Essai sur le Classement des Aniniau\ qui vivent sur la Plage et dans les Environs de Dunkerqui 1:1-54. 1876. Es.ai sur le CUKsemcnt des ,\nitnau\ qui vnent sur la Plage cl dans les Environs de Dunkerque 2:55-100. 1878. Les Foraminiferes el les Entomostraces-Ostracodes du Pliocene superieur de I'lle de Rhodes. Mem. Soc. Geol. France. Ser. 3. 1(3). 135 p. TODD, R.. and P. BRONNIMANN. 1957. Recent Foraminifera and Thecamoebina from the eastern Gulf of Paria, Trinidad. Cushman Found. Foraminiferal Res. Spec. Publ. 3. 43 p. TODD. R., and D. LOW. 1961 . Near-shore Foraminifera of Martha's Vineyard Island. Massachusetts. Contrib. Cushman Found. Foraminiferal Res. 12:5-21. WALTON. W. R. 1952. Techniques for recognition nf living Foraminifera. Contrib. Cushman Found. Foraminiferal Res. 3:5^v-60. WARREN, A. D. 1957. Foraminifera of the Buras-Scofield Bayou Region, southeast Louisiana. Contrib. Cushman Found. Foraminiferal Res. 8:29^U). WILLIAMSON. W. C. 1858. On the Recent Foraminifera of Great Britain. Publ. Ray Soc. (Lond.) 29. 107 p. 47 SYSTEMATIC INDEX Adercotryma glomeratum 15 Allogromia laticollaris 19 A mmoastuta inepta 11 Ammobaculites crassus 12 A. dilatatus 12 A. exiguus 12 A mmodiscus minutissimus 10 Ammonia beccarii 39 A . beccarii tepida 39 A. beccarii variant 39 A mmotium cassis 12 Angulogerina angulosa 32 A renoparrella mexicana 19 Astrononion gallowayi 34 Astrorhiza timicola 10 Bolivina pseudoplicata 31 B. variabilis 31 Brizalina pseudopunctata 31 B. striatula 30 B subaenariensis 30 Buccella 2 B. frigida 41 Buccella sp 41 Bulimina marginata 32 Buliminella elegantissima 31 Cassidulina algida 37 C. islandica minuta 37 C. norcrossi 37 Cibicides lobatulus 1 , 42 Cornuspira invotvens 20 C. planorbis 20 Cribrostomoides crassimargo 16 C. jeffreysii 1,16 Crithionina pisum 8 Dendrophrya arborescens 7 Dentalina communis 33 "Discorbis" aguayoi 38 Eggerella advena 13 Elphidium advena 35 E. bartletti 1 , 36 E. clavatum 35 E. excavatum 36 E. frigidum 37 E. galvestonense 1 , 36 E. gunteri 35 E. incertum 36 E. margaritaceum 35 Eoeponidella pulchella 40 Epistominella vitrea 40 Fissurina laevigata 26 F. marginata 26 Fursenkoina fusiformis 30 Gavelinopsis praegeri 39 Glabratella wrightii 40 Glabratellina lauriei 41 Globigerina 1 Globobulimina auriculata 32 Globutina gibba 29 G. glacialis 29 Guttulina lactea 28 Hanzawaia concentrica 42 Haplophragmoides bonplandi 16 H. hancocki 16 Haynesina germanica 34 Helenina anderseni 40 Hemisphaerammina bradyi 6 Hippocrepina indivisa 9 Hopkinsina atlantica 1,33 Iridia diaphana 6 Jadammina polystoma 19 Lagena clavata 25 L. laevis 24 L. mollis 25 L. striata 25 Laryngosigma williamsoni 27 Lenticulina occidentalis 33 Miliammina 2 M. fusca 1,15 A/, petila 15 Miliolinella subrotunda 23 Nonionella turgida 34 Nonionellina labradorica 34 Oolina borealis 26 O. globosa 25 O. melo 26 Patellina corrugata 38 Pateoris hauerinoides 20 Pelosina cylindrica 9 Planorbulina acervalis 42 Planulina mera 42 Poroeponides lateralis 1,41 Psammosphaera fusca 8 Pseudoclavulina gracilis 13 Pseudononion atlanticum 34 Pseudopolymorphina novangliae 28 P. phaleropei 1, 28 Pyrgo subsphaerica 20 Quinqueloculina auberiana 21 Q. bicornis 21 Q. frigida 21 Q.lata 2, 22 Q. seminulum forma typica 22 Q. seminulum forma jugosa 22 Reophax arcticus 11 R. curtus 11 R. scorpiurus 11 R. scottii 10 Rhabdammina 6, 7 Rhabdamminal sp 9 Rosalina floridana 38 Saccammina difflugiformis forma typica 9 S. difflugiformis forma atlantica 9 Saccammina! sp 8 Spiroplectammina 2 S. biformis 14 S. typica 14 Textularia earlandi 14 T. torquata 14 Tholosina bulla 7 T. vesicularis 7 48 Thurammina papiUata 10 T. compacta 18 Thuramminal limnetis 7 T. inflata 17 Tiphotrocha comprimata 19 T. macrescens 17 Tolypammina vagans 6 T. nana ' o Triloculina brevidentata 2, 24 T. ochracea 17 r. concisa 24 T. rotaliformis 18 T. oblonga 23 T. squamata 17 T. irigonula 23 Vasiglobulina sp 29 Trochamminaadvena 18 Webbinetla concava 27 49 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Preparation of the "Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States" is being coordinated by the following Board: Coordinating Editor: Editorial Advisers: Melbourne R. Carriker, College of Marine Studies, University of Delaware, Lewes, DE 19958. Marie B. Abbott, 259 High Street, Coventry, Conn. Arthur G. Humes, Boston University Marine Program, Marine Biological Labora- tory,Woods Hole, Mass. Wesley N. Tiffney, Professor Emeritus, Boston University, 226 Edge Hill Road, Sharon, Mass. Ruth D. Turner, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. Roland L. Wigley, National Marine Fisheries Service, Northeast Fisheries Center, NOAA, Woods Hold, Mass. Robert T. Wilce, Department of Botany, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Mass. The Board established the format for the "Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States!' invites systematists to collaborate in the preparation of manuals, reviews manuscripts, and advises the Scientific Editor of the National Marine Fisheries Service. The authors acknowledge with sincere appreciation the helpful sug- gestions and gifts of specimens received from several of their colleagues during the course of compiling this key, chiefly Martin A. Buzas, Stephen J. Culver, Robert L. Ellison, C. Wylie Poag, David B. Scott, and Roland L. Wigley. The key was tried out by three student workers who had had little or no experience in dealing with forams. Their frustrations and difficulties with the key enabled the authors to enlarge and improve it; the invaluable assistance of Merry Cavanaugh, Angela Lanham, and Cathy McNair, all of the Smith- sonian Institution, is gratefully acknowledged. The careful work of Ann Wallace of Chilmark, Mass., in doing the illustrations is also appreciated. 50 COORDINATING EDITOR'S COMMENTS Publication of the "Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States" is most timely in view of the growing universal empha- sis on environmental work and the urgent need for more precise and complete identification of coastal organisms than has been available. It is mandatory, wherever possible, that organisms be identified accurately to species. Accurate scientific names unlock the great quan- tities of biological information stored in libraries, obviate duplication of research already done, and often make possible prediction of attributes of organisms that have been inadequately studied. Ruth Todd began her studies of Foraminifera in 1940 as research assistant to Joseph A. Cushman at the former Cushman Laboratory for Foraminiferal Research in Sharon, Mass., and continued there until 1950. Following the death of the Director of the Laboratory and the consequent transfer of the Laboratory to the U.S. National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., Ruth Todd con- tinued her studies of Foraminifera at the National Museum as a member of the Paleontology and Stratigraphy Branch of the U.S. Geological Survey. Following her retirement in 1973, she resumed her collection and studies of the Foraminifera of the Atlantic coastal regions. Doris Low began work on and studies of Foraminifera in 1951, working with Ruth Todd as a member of the Paleontology and Stratigraphy Branch of the U.S. Geological Survey. With collections made around the island of Martha's Vineyard during the summers of 1957 and 1958, she began intensive study of the Foraminifera of coastal New England. Preparation of this manual was supported in part by a grant from the Environmental Protection Agency to the Editorial Board of the "Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States!' Work on the "Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States" by the Coordinating Editor is supported by the College of Marine Studies, University of Delaware. Manuals are available from the following: Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402, for a charge. User Service Branch, Library and Information Services, Division D822, Washington Science Center, Building 4, Rockville, MD 20852, at no charge as long as the supply lasts. National Technical Information Services, U.S. Department of Commerce, 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161, either as paper copy or microTiche, for a charge. Manuals are not copyrighted, and so may be photocopied from the NOAA Technical Report NMFS Circulars available in most major libraries. The manuals so far published in the NOAA Technical Report NMFS Circulars series are listed below by author, title, circular number, and NTIS accession number. Marine Flora and Fauna of the Northeastern United States: Circular No. NTIS No. COOK, DAVID G., and RALPH O. BRINKHURST. Annelida: Oligochaeta. BORROR, ARTHUR C. Protozoa: Ciliophora. MOUL, EDWIN T. Higher Plants of the Marine Fringe. McCLOSKEY, LAWRENCE R. Pycnogonida. MANNING, RAYMOND B. Crustacea: Stomatopoda. WILLIAMS, AUSTON B. Crustacea: Decapoda. POLLOCK, LELAND W. Tardigrada. LARSON, RONALD J. Cnidaria: Scyphozoa. CAVALIERE, A. R. Higher Fungi: Ascomycetes, Deuteromycetes, and Basidiomycetes. COULL, BRUCE C. Copepoda: Harpacticoida. CUTLER, EDWARD B. Sipuncula. PAWSON, DAVID L. Echinodermata: Holothuroidea. HO, JU-SHEY. Copepoda: Lernaeopodidae and Sphyriidae. HO, JU-SHEY. Copepoda: Cyclopoids Parasitic on Fishes. CRESSEY, ROGER F. Crustacea: Branchiura. BOVEE, EUGENE C, and THOMAS K. SAWYER. Protozoa: Sarcodina: Amoebae. WATLING, LES. Crustacea: Cumacea. ZULLO, VICTOR A. Arthropoda: Cirripedia. TODD, RUTH, and DORIS LOW. Protozoa: Sarcodina: Benthic Foraminifera 374 378 384 386 387 389 394 397 398 399 40J 405 406 409 413 419 423 425 COM 73 50670 COM 73 50888 COM 74 50019 COM 74 50014 COM 74 50487 COM 74 51194 PB 257 987 PB 261 839 PB 268 036 PB 268 714 PB 273 062 PB 274 999 PB 280 040 PB 281 969 PB 222 923 PB 285 538 PB 296 460 PB 297 676 ft U.S. GOVERNMENT PPINTtNG OPPICE: 1981— 798.'ll6/232 REGION IC 51 NOAA TECHNICAL REPORTS NMFS Circular and Special Scientific Report— Fisheries .0 Guidelines for Contributors CONTENTS OF MANUSCRIPT First page. Give the title (as concise^s possible) of the paper and the author's name, and footnote the author's affiliation, mailing address, and ZIP code. Contents. Contains the text headings and abbreviated figure legends and table headings. Dots should follow each entry and page numbers should be omitted. Abstract. Not to e.xceed one double-spaced page. Foot- notes and literature citations do not belong in the abstract. Text. See also Form of the Manuscript below. 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