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Foraminifera

Foraminifera (/fəˌræməˈnɪfərə/ fə-RAM-ə-NIH-fə-rə; Latin for "hole bearers"; informally called "forams") are single-celled organisms, members of a phylum or class of Cercozoan protists characterized by streaming granular ectoplasm for catching food and other uses; and commonly an external shell (called a "test") of diverse forms and materials. Tests of chitin (found in some simple genera, and Textularia in particular) are believed to be the most primitive type. Most foraminifera are marine, the majority of which live on or within the seafloor sediment (i.e., are benthic, with different sized species playing a role within the macrobenthos, meiobenthos, and microbenthos),[2] while a smaller number float in the water column at various depths (i.e., are planktonic), which belong to the suborder Globigerinina.[3] Fewer are known from freshwater[4] or brackish[5] conditions, and some very few (nonaquatic) soil species have been identified through molecular analysis of small subunit ribosomal DNA.[6][7]

Foraminifera typically produce a test, or shell, which can have either one or multiple chambers, some becoming quite elaborate in structure.[8] These shells are commonly made of calcium carbonate (CaCO
3
) or agglutinated sediment particles. Over 50,000 species are recognized, both living (6,700–10,000)[9][10] and fossil (40,000).[11][12] They are usually less than 1 mm in size, but some are much larger, the largest species reaching up to 20 cm.[13]

In modern scientific English, the term foraminifera is both singular and plural (irrespective of the word's Latin derivation), and is used to describe one or more specimens or taxa: its usage as singular or plural must be determined from context. Foraminifera is frequently used informally to describe the group, and in these cases is generally lowercase.[14]

History of study edit

The earliest known reference to foraminifera comes from Herodotus, who in the 5th century BCE noted them as making up the rock that forms the Great Pyramid of Giza. These are today recognized as representatives of the genus Nummulites. Strabo, in the 1st Century BCE, noted the same foraminifera, and suggested that they were the remains of lentils left by the workers who built the pyramids.[15]

Robert Hooke observed a foraminifera under the microscope, as described and illustrated in his 1665 book Micrographia:

I was trying several small and single Magnifying Glasses, and casually viewing a parcel of white Sand, when I perceiv'd one of the grains exactly shap'd and wreath'd like a Shell[...] I view'd it every way with a better Microscope and found it on both sides, and edge-ways, to resemble the Shell of a small Water-Snail with a flat spiral Shell[...][16]

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek described and illustrated foraminiferal tests in 1700, describing them as minute cockles; his illustration is recognizable as being Elphidium.[17] Early workers classified foraminifera within the genus Nautilus, noting their similarity to certain cephalopods. It was recognised by Lorenz Spengler in 1781 that foraminifera had holes in the septa, which would eventually grant the group its name.[18] Spengler also noted that the septa of foraminifera arced the opposite way from those of nautili and that they lacked a nerve tube.[19]

 
Earliest known illustration of a foraminifera shell, published by Robert Hooke in his 1665 book Micrographia

Alcide d'Orbigny, in his 1826 work, considered them to be a group of minute cephalopods and noted their odd morphology, interpreting the pseudopodia as tentacles and noting the highly reduced (in actuality, absent) head.[20] He named the group foraminifères, or "hole-bearers", as members of the group had holes in the divisions between compartments in their shells, in contrast to nautili or ammonites.[14]

The protozoan nature of foraminifera was first recognized by Dujardin in 1835.[18] Shortly after, in 1852, d'Orbigny produced a classification scheme, recognising 72 genera of foraminifera, which he classified based on test shape—a scheme that drew severe criticism from colleagues.[17]

H.B. Brady's 1884 monograph described the foraminiferal finds of the Challenger expedition. Brady recognized 10 families with 29 subfamilies, with little regard to stratigraphic range; his taxonomy emphasized the idea that multiple different characters must separate taxonomic groups, and as such placed agglutinated and calcareous genera in close relation.

This overall scheme of classification would remain until Cushman's work in the late 1920s. Cushman viewed wall composition as the single most important trait in classification of foraminifera; his classification became widely accepted but also drew criticism from colleagues for being "not biologically sound".

Geologist Irene Crespin undertook extensive research in this field, publishing some ninety papers—including notable work on foraminifera—as sole author as well as more than twenty in collaboration with other scientists.[21]

Cushman's scheme nevertheless remained the dominant scheme of classification until Tappan and Loeblich's 1964 classification, which placed foraminifera into the general groupings still used today, based on microstructure of the test wall.[17] These groups have been variously moved around according to different schemes of higher-level classification. Pawlowski's (2013) use of molecular systematics has generally confirmed Tappan and Loeblich's groupings, with some being found as polyphyletic or paraphyletic; this work has also helped to identify higher-level relationships among major foraminiferal groups.[22]

Taxonomy edit

"Monothalamids" (paraphyletic)

Phylogeny of Foraminifera following Pawlowski et al. 2013.[22] The monothalamid orders Astrorhizida and Allogromiida are both paraphyletic.

The taxonomic position of the Foraminifera has varied since Schultze in 1854,[23] who referred to as an order, Foraminiferida. Loeblich (1987) and Tappan (1992) reranked Foraminifera as a class[24] as it is now commonly regarded.

The Foraminifera have typically been included in the Protozoa,[25][26][27] or in the similar Protoctista or Protist kingdom.[28][29] Compelling evidence, based primarily on molecular phylogenetics, exists for their belonging to a major group within the Protozoa known as the Rhizaria.[25] Prior to the recognition of evolutionary relationships among the members of the Rhizaria, the Foraminifera were generally grouped with other amoeboids as phylum Rhizopodea (or Sarcodina) in the class Granuloreticulosa.

The Rhizaria are problematic, as they are often called a "supergroup", rather than using an established taxonomic rank such as phylum. Cavalier-Smith defines the Rhizaria as an infra-kingdom within the kingdom Protozoa.[25]

Some taxonomies put the Foraminifera in a phylum of their own, putting them on par with the amoeboid Sarcodina in which they had been placed.

Although as yet unsupported by morphological correlates, molecular data strongly suggest the Foraminifera are closely related to the Cercozoa and Radiolaria, both of which also include amoeboids with complex shells; these three groups make up the Rhizaria.[26] However, the exact relationships of the forams to the other groups and to one another are still not entirely clear. Foraminifera are closely related to testate amoebae.[30]

Anatomy edit

 
Schematic diagram of a live multilocular foraminifera. 1-endoplasm, 2-ectoplasm, 3-chamber, 4-pores, 5-foramen, 6-food vacuole, 7-nucleus, 8-mitochondria, 9-granureticulose pseudopodia, 10-granules, 11- primary aperture, 12-food particle, 13-Golgi apparatus, 14-ribosomes.

The most striking aspect of most foraminifera are their hard shells, or tests. These may consist of one of multiple chambers, and may be composed of protein, sediment particles, calcite, aragonite, or (in one case) silica.[24] Some foraminifera lack tests entirely.[32] Unlike other shell-secreting organisms, such as molluscs or corals, the tests of foraminifera are located inside the cell membrane, within the protoplasm. The organelles of the cell are located within the compartment(s) of the test, and the hole(s) of the test allow the transfer of material from the pseudopodia to the internal cell and back.[33]

The foraminiferal cell is divided into granular endoplasm and transparent ectoplasm from which a pseudopodial net may emerge through a single opening or through many perforations in the test. Individual pseudopods characteristically have small granules streaming in both directions.[34] Foraminifera are unique in having granuloreticulose pseudopodia; that is, their pseudopodia appear granular under the microscope; these pseudopodia are often elongate and may split and rejoin each other. These can be extended and retracted to suit the needs of the cell. The pseudopods are used for locomotion, anchoring, excretion, test construction and in capturing food, which consists of small organisms such as diatoms or bacteria.[35][33]

Aside from the tests, foraminiferal cells are supported by a cytoskeleton of microtubules, which are loosely arranged without the structure seen in other amoeboids. Forams have evolved special cellular mechanisms to quickly assemble and disassemble microtubules, allowing for the rapid formation and retraction of elongated pseudopodia.[24]

In the gamont (sexual form), foraminifera generally have only a single nucleus, while the agamont (asexual form) tends to have multiple nuclei. In at least some species the nuclei are dimorphic, with the somatic nuclei containing three times as much protein and RNA than the generative nuclei. However, nuclear anatomy seems to be highly diverse.[36] The nuclei are not necessarily confined to one chamber in multi-chambered species. Nuclei can be spherical or have many lobes. Nuclei are typically 30-50 µm in diameter.[37]

Some species of foraminifera have large, empty vacuoles within their cells; the exact purpose of these is unclear, but they have been suggested to function as a reservoir of nitrate.[37]

Mitochondria are distributed evenly throughout the cell, though in some species they are concentrated under the pores and around the external margin of the cell. This has been hypothesised to be an adaptation to low-oxygen environments.[37]

Several species of xenophyophore have been found to have unusually high concentrations of radioactive isotopes within their cells, among the highest of any eukaryote. The purpose of this is unknown.[38]

Ecology edit

 
Photomicrographs of living planktonic foraminifera [39]
(1) Orbulina universa, (2) Sphaeroidinella dehiscens, (3) Globigerinoides sacculifer, (4) Globigerinoides conglobatus, (5) Globigerinoides ruber (white), (6) Globigerinoides ruber (pink), (7) Globoturborotalita rubescens, (8) Globoturborotalita tenella, (9) Globigerinella calida, (10) Globigerinella siphonifera Type I, (11) Globigerinella siphonifera Type II, (12) Globigerinella adamsi, (13) Globigerina bulloides, (14) Turborotalita quinqueloba, (15) Turborotalita humilis, (16) Hastigerina pelagica, (17) Hastigerinella digitata, (18) Neogloboquadrina incompta, (19) Neogloboquadrina pachyderma, (20) Neogloboquadrina dutertrei, (21) Pulleniatina obliquiloculata, (22) Globorotalia inflata, (23) Globorotalia menardii, (24) Globorotalia scitula, (25) Globorotalia crassaformis, (26) Globorotalia truncatulinoides, (27) Candeina nitida, (28) Globigerinita glutinata, (29) Globigerinita uvula, and (30) Tenuitella fleisheri.
Scale bars 200 µm

Modern Foraminifera are primarily marine organisms, but living individuals have been found in brackish, freshwater[34] and even terrestrial habitats.[7] The majority of the species are benthic, and a further 50 morphospecies are planktonic.[35] This count may, however, represent only a fraction of actual diversity, since many genetically distinct species may be morphologically indistinguishable.[40]

Benthic foraminifera are typically found in fine-grained sediments, where they actively move between layers; however, many species are found on hard rock substrates, attached to seaweeds, or sitting atop the sediment surface.[24]

The majority of planktonic foraminifera are found in the globigerinina, a lineage within the rotaliida.[22] However, at least one other extant rotaliid lineage, Neogallitellia, seems to have independently evolved a planktonic lifestyle.[41][42] Further, it has been suggested that some Jurassic fossil foraminifera may have also independently evolved a planktonic lifestyle, and may be members of Robertinida.[43]

A number of forams, both benthic and planktonic,[44][45] have unicellular algae as endosymbionts, from diverse lineages such as the green algae, red algae, golden algae, diatoms, and dinoflagellates.[35] These mixotrophic foraminifers are particularly common in nutrient-poor oceanic waters.[46] Some forams are kleptoplastic, retaining chloroplasts from ingested algae to conduct photosynthesis.[47]

Most foraminifera are heterotrophic, consuming smaller organisms and organic matter; some smaller species are specialised feeders on phytodetritus, while others specialise in consuming diatoms. Some benthic forams construct feeding cysts, using the pseuodopodia to encyst themselves inside of sediment and organic particles.[24] Certain foraminifera prey upon small animals such as copepods or cumaceans; some forams even predate upon other forams, drilling holes into the tests of their prey.[48] One group, the xenophyophores, has been suggested to farm bacteria within their tests, although studies have failed to find support for this hypothesis.[49] Suspension feeding is also common in the group, and at least some species can take advantage of dissolved organic carbon.[24]

A few foram species are parasitic, infecting sponges, molluscs, corals, or even other foraminifera. Parasitic strategies vary; some act as ectoparasites, using their pseudopodia to steal food from the host, while others burrow through the shell or body wall of their host to feed on its soft tissue.[24]

Foraminifera are themselves eaten by a host of larger organisms, including invertebrates, fish, shorebirds, and other foraminifera. It has been suggested, however, that in some cases predators may be more interested in the calcium from foram shells than in the organisms themselves. Several aquatic snail species are known to selectively feed upon foraminifera, often even preferring individual species.[50]

Certain benthic foraminifera have been found to be capable of surviving anoxic conditions for over 24 hours, indicating that they are capable of selective anaerobic respiration. This is interpreted as an adaptation to survive changing oxygenic conditions near the sediment-water interface.[51]

Foraminifera are found in the deepest parts of the ocean such as the Mariana Trench, including the Challenger Deep, the deepest part known. At these depths, below the carbonate compensation depth, the calcium carbonate of the tests is soluble in water due to the extreme pressure. The Foraminifera found in the Challenger Deep thus have no carbonate test, but instead have one of organic material.[52]

Nonmarine foraminifera have traditionally been neglected in foram research, but recent studies show them to be substantially more diverse than previously known. They are known to inhabit disparate ecological niches, including mosses, rivers, lakes and ponds, wetlands, soils, peat bogs, and sand dunes.[53]

Reproduction edit

The generalized foraminiferal life-cycle involves an alternation between haploid and diploid generations, although they are mostly similar in form.[23][54] The haploid or gamont initially has a single nucleus, and divides to produce numerous gametes, which typically have two flagella. The diploid or agamont is multinucleate, and after meiosis divides to produce new gamonts. Multiple rounds of asexual reproduction between sexual generations are not uncommon in benthic forms.[34]

 
Diagram of a typical foraminiferan life cycle, showing characteristic alternation of generations.

Foraminifera exhibit morphological dimorphism associated with their reproductive cycle. The gamont, or sexually reproducing haploid form, is megalospheric—that is, its proloculus, or first chamber, is proportionally large. The gamont is also known as the A form. Gamonts, despite having typically larger proloculi, also generally have smaller overall test diameter than do agamonts.

After reaching maturity, the gamont divides via mitosis to produce thousands of gametes which are also haploid. These gametes all have a full set of organelles, and are expelled from the test into the environment leaving the test undamaged. Gametes are not differentiated into sperm and egg, and any two gametes from a species can generally fertilize each other.

 
Morphs present in the foram life cycle—the megalosphere and the microsphere. The name derives from the size of the proloculus, or first chamber, and as such the microsphere has a larger overall size.

When two gametes combine, they create a diploid, multi-nucleated cell known as the agamont, or B form. In contrast to the gamont, the agamont is microspheric, with a proportionally small first chamber but typically larger overall diameter with more chambers. The agamont is the asexual reproduction phase of the foraminifera; upon reaching adulthood, the protoplasm entirely vacates the test and divides its cytoplasm meiotically via multiple fission to form a number of haploid offspring. These offspring then begin to form their megalospheric first chamber before dispersing.

In some cases the haploid young may mature into a megalospheric form which then reproduces asexually to produce another megalospheric, haploid offspring. In this case, the first megalospheric form is referred to as the schizont or A1 form, while the second is referred to as the gamont or A2 form.

 
Fossil nummulitid foraminiferans showing microspheric (larger) and megalospheric individuals (smaller); Eocene of the United Arab Emirates; scale in mm

Maturation and reproduction occur more slowly in cooler and deeper water; these conditions also cause forams to grow larger. A forms always seem to be much more numerous than are B forms, likely due to the reduced likelihood of two gametes encountering one another and successfully combining.[55][33]

Variations in reproductive mode edit

There is a high degree of diversity in reproductive strategies in different foraminiferal groups.

In unilocular species, the A form and B form are still present. As in the microspheric morph of multilocular forams, the asexually reproducing B form is larger than the sexually reproducing A form.

Forams in the family Spirillinidae have amoeboid gametes rather than flagellated. Other aspects of reproduction in this group are generally similar to that of other groups of forams.

The calcareous spirillinid Patellina corrugata has a slightly different reproductive strategy than most other foraminifera. The asexually reproducing B form produces a cyst that surrounds the entire cell; it then divides within this cyst and the juvenile cells cannibalise the calcite of the parent's test to form the first chamber of their own test. These A forms, upon maturity, gather into groups of up to nine individuals; they then form a protective cyst around the whole group. Gametogenesis occurs within this cyst, producing very low numbers of gametes. The B form larvae are produced inside of the cyst; any nuclei that are not bound into cells are consumed as food for the developing larvae. Patellina in A form is reportedly dioecious, with sexes referred to as the "plus" and "minus"; these sexes differ in number of nuclei, with the "plus" form having three nuclei and the "minus" form having four nuclei. The B form is again larger than the A form.[33][55][48]

Tests edit

 
Foraminiferan tests (ventral view)

Foraminiferal tests serve to protect the organism within. Owing to their generally hard and durable construction (compared to other protists), the tests of foraminifera are a major source of scientific knowledge about the group.

Openings in the test that allow the cytoplasm to extend outside are called apertures.[56] The primary aperture, leading to the exterior, take many different shapes in different species, including but not limited to rounded, crescent-shaped, slit-shaped, hooded, radiate (star-shaped), dendritic (branching). Some foraminifera have "toothed", flanged, or lipped primary apertures. There may be only one primary aperture or multiple; when multiple are present, they may be clustered or equatorial. In addition to the primary aperture, many foraminifera have supplemental apertures. These may form as relict apertures (past primary apertures from an earlier growth stage) or as unique structures.

Test shape is highly variable among different foraminifera; they may be single-chambered (unilocular) or multi-chambered (multilocular). In multilocular forms, new chambers are added as the organism grows. A wide variety of test morphologies is found in both unilocular and multilocular forms, including spiraled, serial, and milioline, among others.[33]

Many foraminifera exhibit dimorphism in their tests, with megalospheric and microspheric individuals. These names should not be taken as referring to the size of the full organism; rather, they refer to the size of the first chamber, or proloculus. Tests as fossils are known from as far back as the Ediacaran period,[57] and many marine sediments are composed primarily of them. For instance, the limestone that makes up the pyramids of Egypt is composed almost entirely of nummulitic benthic Foraminifera.[58] It is estimated that reef Foraminifera generate about 43 million tons of calcium carbonate per year.[59]

Genetic studies have identified the naked amoeba Reticulomyxa and the peculiar xenophyophores as foraminiferans without tests. A few other amoeboids produce reticulose pseudopods, and were formerly classified with the forams as the Granuloreticulosa, but this is no longer considered a natural group, and most are now placed among the Cercozoa.[60]

Evolutionary history edit

Molecular clocks indicate that the crown-group of foraminifera likely evolved during the Neoproterozoic, between 900 and 650 million years ago; this timing is consistent with Neoproterozoic fossils of the closely related filose amoebae. As fossils of foraminifera have not been found prior to the very end of the Ediacaran, it is likely that most of these Proterozoic forms did not have hard-shelled tests.[61][62]

Due to their non-mineralised tests, "allogromiids" have no fossil record.[61]

 
The mysterious Paleodictyon has been interpreted as a fossil xenophyophore but this remains controversial.

The mysterious vendozoans of the Ediacaran period have been suggested to represent fossil xenophyophores.[63] However, the discovery of diagenetically altered C27 sterols associated with the remains of Dickinsonia cast doubt on this identification and suggest it may instead be an animal.[64] Other researchers have suggested that the elusive trace fossil Paleodictyon and its relatives may represent a fossil xenophyophore[65] and noted the similarity of the extant xenophyophore Occultammina to the fossil;[66] however, modern examples of Paleodictyon have not been able to clear up the issue and the trace may alternately represent a burrow or a glass sponge.[67] Supporting this notion is the similar habitat of living xenophyophores to the inferred habitat of fossil graphoglyptids; however, the large size and regularity of many graphoglyptids as well as the apparent absence of xenophyae in their fossils casts doubt on the possibility.[66] As of 2017 no definite xenophyophore fossils have been found.[68]

Test-bearing foraminifera have an excellent fossil record throughout the Phanerozoic eon. The earliest known definite foraminifera appear in the fossil record towards the very end of the Ediacaran; these forms all have agglutinated tests and are unilocular. These include forms like Platysolenites and Spirosolenites.[69][57] Single-chambered foraminifera continued to diversity throughout the Cambrian. Some commonly encountered forms include Ammodiscus, Glomospira, Psammosphera, and Turritellella; these species are all agglutinated. They make up part of the Ammodiscina, a lineage of spirillinids that still contains modern forms.[70][22] Later spirillinids would evolve multilocularity and calcitic tests, with the first such forms appearing during the Triassic; the group saw little effects on diversity due to the K-Pg extinction.[71]

The earliest multi-chambered foraminifera are agglutinated species, and appear in the fossil record during the middle Cambrian period. Due to their poor preservation they cannot be positively assigned to any major foram group.[70]

 
Cutaway view of a Fusulinid

The earliest known calcareous-walled foraminifera are the Fusulinids, which appear in the fossil record during the Llandoverian epoch of the early Silurian. The earliest of these were microscopic, planispirally coiled, and evolute; later forms evolved a diversity of shapes including lenticular, globular, and elongated rice-shaped forms.[72][73]

Later species of fusulinids grew to much larger size, with some forms reaching 5 cm in length; reportedly, some specimens reach up to 14 cm in length, making them among the largest foraminifera extant or extinct. Fusulinids are the earliest lineage of foraminifera thought to have evolved symbiosis with photosynthetic organisms. Fossils of fusulinids have been found on all continents except Antarctica; they reached their greatest diversity during the Visean epoch of the Carboniferous. The group then gradually declined in diversity until finally going extinct during the Permo-Triassic extinction event.[33][71][74]

During the Tournaisian epoch of the Carboniferous, Miliolid foraminifera first appeared in the fossil record, having diverged from the spirillinids within the Tubothalamea. Miliolids suffered about 50% casualties during both the Permo-Triassic and K-Pg extinctions but survived to the present day. Some fossil miliolids reached up to 2 cm in diameter.[71]

 
A fossil test from a planktonic globigerininan foraminifera.

The earliest known Lagenid fossils appear during the Moscovian epoch of the Carboniferous. Seeing little effect due to the Permo-Triassic or K-Pg extinctions, the group diversified through time. Secondarily unilocular taxa evolved during the Jurassic and Cretaceous.

The earliest Involutinid fossils appear during the Permian; the lineage diversified throughout the Mesozoic of Eurasia before apparently vanishing from the fossil record following the Cenomanian-Turonian Ocean Anoxic Event. The extant group planispirillinidae has been referred to the involutinida, but this remains the subject of debate.[75][71]

The Robertinida first appear in the fossil record during the Anisian epoch of the Triassic. The group remained at low diversity throughout its fossil history; all living representatives belong to the Robertinidae, which first appeared during the Paleocene.[71]

The first definite Rotaliid fossils do not appear in the fossil record until the Pliensbachian epoch of the Jurassic, following the Triassic-Jurassic event.[76] Diversity of the group remained low until the aftermath of the Cenomanian-Turonian event, after which the group saw a rapid diversification. Of this group, the planktonic Globigerinina—the first known group of planktonic forams—first appears in the aftermath of the Toarcian Turnover; the group saw heavy losses during both the K-Pg extinction and the Eocene-Oligocene extinction, but remains extant and diverse to this day.[71] An additional evolution of planktonic lifestyle occurred in the Miocene or Pliocene, when the rotaliid Neogallitellia independently evolved a planktonic lifestyle.[41][42]

Paleontological applications edit

Dying planktonic Foraminifera continuously rain down on the sea floor in vast numbers, their mineralized tests preserved as fossils in the accumulating sediment. Beginning in the 1960s, and largely under the auspices of the Deep Sea Drilling, Ocean Drilling, and International Ocean Drilling Programmes, as well as for the purposes of oil exploration, advanced deep-sea drilling techniques have been bringing up sediment cores bearing Foraminifera fossils.[77] The effectively unlimited supply of these fossil tests and the relatively high-precision age-control models available for cores has produced an exceptionally high-quality planktonic Foraminifera fossil record dating back to the mid-Jurassic, and presents an unparalleled record for scientists testing and documenting the evolutionary process.[77] The exceptional quality of the fossil record has allowed an impressively detailed picture of species inter-relationships to be developed on the basis of fossils, in many cases subsequently validated independently through molecular genetic studies on extant specimens[78]

Because certain types of foraminifera are found only in certain environments, their fossils can be used to figure out the kind of environment under which ancient marine sediments were deposited; conditions such as salinity, depth, oxygenic conditions, and light conditions can be determined from the different habitat preferences of various species of forams. This allows workers to track changing climates and environmental conditions over time by aggregating information about the foraminifera present.[79]

In other cases, the relative proportion of planktonic to benthic foraminifera fossils found in a rock can be used as a proxy for the depth of a given locality when the rocks were being deposited.[80]

 
Ten species of planktic foraminifera microfossils from Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) sediments in southern Maryland.[81] The scale bars measure 150 microns (0.015 cm). Each specimen is similar in size to a grain of sand.
 
Climate change during the last 65 million years as expressed by the oxygen isotope composition of benthic foraminifera. The Paleocene-Eocene thermal maximum is characterized by a brief but prominent excursion, attributed to rapid warming.[82][83][84]

Since at least 1997, the Paleocene–Eocene thermal maximum (PETM) has been investigated as an analogy for understanding the effects of global warming and of massive carbon inputs to the ocean and atmosphere, including ocean acidification.[85] Humans today emit about 10 Gt of carbon (about 37 Gt CO2e) per year, and at that rate will release a comparable amount to the PETM in about one thousand years. A main difference is that during the PETM the planet was ice-free, as the Drake Passage had not yet opened and the Central American Seaway had not yet closed.[86] Although the PETM is now commonly held to be a case study for global warming and massive carbon emission, the cause, details, and overall significance of the event remain uncertain.[87][88][89][90]

 
Neoflabellina reticulata from chalk of Rügen, Northeastern Germany. Length:1.2 mm, Age: Upper lower Maastrichtian

Foraminifera have significant application in the field of biostratigraphy. Due to their small size and hard shells, foraminifera may be preserved in great abundance and with high quality of preservation; due to their complex morphology, individual species are easily recognizable. Foraminifera species in the fossil record have limited ranges between the species' first evolution and their disappearance; stratigraphers have worked out the successive changes in foram assemblages throughout much of the Phanerozoic. As such, the assemblage of foraminifera within a given locality can be analyzed and compared to known dates of appearance and disappearance in order to narrow down the age of the rocks. This allows paleontologists to interpret the age of sedimentary rocks when radiometric dating is not applicable.[91] This application of foraminifera was discovered by Alva C. Ellisor in 1920.[92]

 
Thin section of a peneroplid foraminiferan from Holocene lagoonal sediment in Rice Bay, San Salvador Island, Bahamas. Scale bar 100 micrometres

Calcareous fossil foraminifera are formed from elements found in the ancient seas where they lived. Thus, they are very useful in paleoclimatology and paleoceanography. They can be used, as a climate proxy, to reconstruct past climate by examining the stable isotope ratios and trace element content of the shells (tests). Global temperature and ice volume can be revealed by the isotopes of oxygen, and the history of the carbon cycle and oceanic productivity by examining the stable isotope ratios of carbon;[93] see δ18O and δ13C. The concentration of trace elements, like strontium (Sr),[94] magnesium (Mg),[95] lithium (Li)[96] and boron (B),[97] also hold a wealth of information about global temperature cycles, continental weathering, and the role of the ocean in the global carbon cycle. Geographic patterns seen in the fossil records of planktonic forams are also used to reconstruct ancient ocean currents.

Modern uses edit

The oil industry relies heavily on microfossils such as forams to find potential hydrocarbon deposits.[98]

 
Ammonia beccarii, a benthic foram from the North Sea.

For the same reasons they make useful biostratigraphic markers, living foraminiferal assemblages have been used as bioindicators in coastal environments, including indicators of coral reef health. Because calcium carbonate is susceptible to dissolution in acidic conditions, foraminifera may be particularly affected by changing climate and ocean acidification.

 
Foraminifera Baculogypsina sphaerulata of Hatoma Island, Japan. Field width 5.22 mm

Foraminifera have many uses in petroleum exploration and are used routinely to interpret the ages and paleoenvironments of sedimentary strata in oil wells.[99] Agglutinated fossil foraminifera buried deeply in sedimentary basins can be used to estimate thermal maturity, which is a key factor for petroleum generation. The Foraminiferal Colouration Index[100] (FCI) is used to quantify colour changes and estimate burial temperature. FCI data is particularly useful in the early stages of petroleum generation (about 100 °C).

Foraminifera can also be used in archaeology in the provenancing of some stone raw material types. Some stone types, such as limestone, are commonly found to contain fossilised foraminifera. The types and concentrations of these fossils within a sample of stone can be used to match that sample to a source known to contain the same "fossil signature".[101]

Gallery edit

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External links edit

General information
  • The University of California Museum of Paleontology website has an Introduction to the Foraminifera
  • Researchers at the University of South Florida developed a system using Foraminifera for monitoring coral reef environments 15 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • University College London's micropaleontology site has an overview of Foraminifera, including many high-quality SEMs
  • Illustrated glossary of terms used in foraminiferal research 21 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine is the Lukas Hottinger's glossary published in the OA e-journal "Carnets de Géologie – Notebooks on Geology" 29 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • Martin Langer's Micropaleontology Page
  • Benthic Foraminifera information from the 2005 Urbino Summer School of Paleoclimatology
Online flip-books
  • Illustrated glossary of terms used in foraminiferal research by Lukas Hottinger (alternative version of the one published in "Carnets de Géologie – Notebooks on Geology" 29 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine)
Resources
  • pforams@mikrotax – an online database detailing the taxonomy of planktonic foraminifera
  • The (part of ) is a cooperative database of information about Foraminifera
  • 3D models of forams, generated by X-ray tomography
  • has , including a and a NB Most of this content is now included in the pforams@mikrotax website
  • eForams is a web site focused on Foraminifera and modeling of foraminiferal shells
  • Foraminifera Gallery Illustrated catalog of recent and fossil Foraminifera by genus and locality
  • "Foraminifera". NCBI Taxonomy Browser. 29178.

foraminifera, latin, hole, bearers, informally, called, forams, single, celled, organisms, members, phylum, class, cercozoan, protists, characterized, streaming, granular, ectoplasm, catching, food, other, uses, commonly, external, shell, called, test, diverse. Foraminifera f e ˌ r ae m e ˈ n ɪ f e r e fe RAM e NIH fe re Latin for hole bearers informally called forams are single celled organisms members of a phylum or class of Cercozoan protists characterized by streaming granular ectoplasm for catching food and other uses and commonly an external shell called a test of diverse forms and materials Tests of chitin found in some simple genera and Textularia in particular are believed to be the most primitive type Most foraminifera are marine the majority of which live on or within the seafloor sediment i e are benthic with different sized species playing a role within the macrobenthos meiobenthos and microbenthos 2 while a smaller number float in the water column at various depths i e are planktonic which belong to the suborder Globigerinina 3 Fewer are known from freshwater 4 or brackish 5 conditions and some very few nonaquatic soil species have been identified through molecular analysis of small subunit ribosomal DNA 6 7 ForaminiferaTemporal range 542 0 Ma 1 PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Latest Ediacaran RecentLive Ammonia tepida Rotaliida Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaClade DiaphoretickesClade SARPhylum RetariaSubphylum Foraminiferad Orbigny 1826Subdivisions Monothalamea Allogromiida Astrorhizida Xenophyophorea ReticulomyxaTubothalamea Miliolida Spirillinida SilicoloculinidaGlobothalamea Textulariida Rotaliida Globigerinida Carterinida Robertinida Fusulinida extinctincertae sedis Involutinida LagenidaForaminifera typically produce a test or shell which can have either one or multiple chambers some becoming quite elaborate in structure 8 These shells are commonly made of calcium carbonate CaCO3 or agglutinated sediment particles Over 50 000 species are recognized both living 6 700 10 000 9 10 and fossil 40 000 11 12 They are usually less than 1 mm in size but some are much larger the largest species reaching up to 20 cm 13 In modern scientific English the term foraminifera is both singular and plural irrespective of the word s Latin derivation and is used to describe one or more specimens or taxa its usage as singular or plural must be determined from context Foraminifera is frequently used informally to describe the group and in these cases is generally lowercase 14 Contents 1 History of study 2 Taxonomy 3 Anatomy 4 Ecology 5 Reproduction 5 1 Variations in reproductive mode 6 Tests 7 Evolutionary history 8 Paleontological applications 9 Modern uses 10 Gallery 11 References 12 External linksHistory of study editThe earliest known reference to foraminifera comes from Herodotus who in the 5th century BCE noted them as making up the rock that forms the Great Pyramid of Giza These are today recognized as representatives of the genus Nummulites Strabo in the 1st Century BCE noted the same foraminifera and suggested that they were the remains of lentils left by the workers who built the pyramids 15 Robert Hooke observed a foraminifera under the microscope as described and illustrated in his 1665 book Micrographia I was trying several small and single Magnifying Glasses and casually viewing a parcel of white Sand when I perceiv d one of the grains exactly shap d and wreath d like a Shell I view d it every way with a better Microscope and found it on both sides and edge ways to resemble the Shell of a small Water Snail with a flat spiral Shell 16 Antonie van Leeuwenhoek described and illustrated foraminiferal tests in 1700 describing them as minute cockles his illustration is recognizable as being Elphidium 17 Early workers classified foraminifera within the genus Nautilus noting their similarity to certain cephalopods It was recognised by Lorenz Spengler in 1781 that foraminifera had holes in the septa which would eventually grant the group its name 18 Spengler also noted that the septa of foraminifera arced the opposite way from those of nautili and that they lacked a nerve tube 19 nbsp Earliest known illustration of a foraminifera shell published by Robert Hooke in his 1665 book MicrographiaAlcide d Orbigny in his 1826 work considered them to be a group of minute cephalopods and noted their odd morphology interpreting the pseudopodia as tentacles and noting the highly reduced in actuality absent head 20 He named the group foraminiferes or hole bearers as members of the group had holes in the divisions between compartments in their shells in contrast to nautili or ammonites 14 The protozoan nature of foraminifera was first recognized by Dujardin in 1835 18 Shortly after in 1852 d Orbigny produced a classification scheme recognising 72 genera of foraminifera which he classified based on test shape a scheme that drew severe criticism from colleagues 17 H B Brady s 1884 monograph described the foraminiferal finds of the Challenger expedition Brady recognized 10 families with 29 subfamilies with little regard to stratigraphic range his taxonomy emphasized the idea that multiple different characters must separate taxonomic groups and as such placed agglutinated and calcareous genera in close relation This overall scheme of classification would remain until Cushman s work in the late 1920s Cushman viewed wall composition as the single most important trait in classification of foraminifera his classification became widely accepted but also drew criticism from colleagues for being not biologically sound Geologist Irene Crespin undertook extensive research in this field publishing some ninety papers including notable work on foraminifera as sole author as well as more than twenty in collaboration with other scientists 21 Cushman s scheme nevertheless remained the dominant scheme of classification until Tappan and Loeblich s 1964 classification which placed foraminifera into the general groupings still used today based on microstructure of the test wall 17 These groups have been variously moved around according to different schemes of higher level classification Pawlowski s 2013 use of molecular systematics has generally confirmed Tappan and Loeblich s groupings with some being found as polyphyletic or paraphyletic this work has also helped to identify higher level relationships among major foraminiferal groups 22 Taxonomy edit Monothalamids paraphyletic Lagenida Monothalamids Tubothalamea MiliolidaSpirillinida Monothalamids XenophyophoreaGlobothalamea Textulariida paraphyletic RobertinidaRotaliidaPhylogeny of Foraminifera following Pawlowski et al 2013 22 The monothalamid orders Astrorhizida and Allogromiida are both paraphyletic The taxonomic position of the Foraminifera has varied since Schultze in 1854 23 who referred to as an order Foraminiferida Loeblich 1987 and Tappan 1992 reranked Foraminifera as a class 24 as it is now commonly regarded The Foraminifera have typically been included in the Protozoa 25 26 27 or in the similar Protoctista or Protist kingdom 28 29 Compelling evidence based primarily on molecular phylogenetics exists for their belonging to a major group within the Protozoa known as the Rhizaria 25 Prior to the recognition of evolutionary relationships among the members of the Rhizaria the Foraminifera were generally grouped with other amoeboids as phylum Rhizopodea or Sarcodina in the class Granuloreticulosa The Rhizaria are problematic as they are often called a supergroup rather than using an established taxonomic rank such as phylum Cavalier Smith defines the Rhizaria as an infra kingdom within the kingdom Protozoa 25 Some taxonomies put the Foraminifera in a phylum of their own putting them on par with the amoeboid Sarcodina in which they had been placed Although as yet unsupported by morphological correlates molecular data strongly suggest the Foraminifera are closely related to the Cercozoa and Radiolaria both of which also include amoeboids with complex shells these three groups make up the Rhizaria 26 However the exact relationships of the forams to the other groups and to one another are still not entirely clear Foraminifera are closely related to testate amoebae 30 Taxonomy from Mikhalevich 2013 31 Foraminifera d Orbigny 1826 Order Reticulomyxida Class Schizocladea Cedhagen amp Mattson 1992 Order Schizocladida Class Xenophyophorea Schultze 1904 Order Stannomida Tendal 1972 Order Psamminida Tendal 1972 Class Astrorhizata Saidova 1981 Subclass Lagynana Mikhalevich 1980 Order Ammoscalariida Mikhalevich 1980 Order Lagynida Mikhalevich 1980 Order Allogromiida Loeblich amp Tappan 1961 Subclass Astrorhizana Saidova 1981 Order Astrorhizida Lankester 1885 Order Dendrophryida Mikhalevich 1995 Order Hippocrepinida Saidova 1981 Order Parathuramminida Mikhalevich 1980 Order Psammosphaerida Haeckel 1894 Class Rotaliata Mikhalevich 1980 hyaline foraminifers Subclass Globigerinana Mikhalevich 1980 Order Cassigerinellida Mikhalevich 2013 Order Globigerinida Carpenter Parker amp Jones 1862 Order Hantkeninida Mikhalevich 1980 Order Heterohelicida Fursenko 1958 Order Globorotaliida Mikhalevich 1980 Subclass Textulariana Mikhalevich 1980 Order Nautiloculinida Mikhalevich 2003 Order Spiroplectamminida Mikhalevich 1992 Order Textulariida Delage amp Herouard 1896 Order Trochamminida Saidova 1981 Carterinida Loeblich amp Tappan 1955 Order Verneuilinida Mikhalevich amp Kaminski 2003 Subclass Rotaliana Mikhalevich 1980 Superorder Robertinoida Mikhalevich 1980 Order Robertinida Mikhalevich 1980 Superorder Nonionoida Saidova 1981 Order Elphidiida Saidova 1981 Order Nummulitida Carpenter Parker amp Jones 1862 Order Orbitoidida Copeland 1956 Order Nonionida Saidova 1981 Superorder Buliminoida Saidova 1981 Order Cassidulinida d Orbigny 1839 Order Buliminida Saidova 1981 Order Bolivinitida Saidova 1981 Superorder Discorboida Ehrenberg 1838 Order Chilostomellida Haeckel 1894 Order Discorbida Ehrenberg 1838 Order Glabratellida Mikhalevich 1994 Order Planorbulinida Mikhalevich 1992 Order Rotaliida Lankester 1885 Order Rosalinida Delage amp Herouard 1896 Class Nodosariata Mikhalevich 1992 Subclass Hormosinana Mikhalevich 1992 Order Ammomarginulinida Mikhalevich 2002 Order Nouriida Mikhalevich 1980 Order Pseudopalmulida Mikhalevich 1992 Order Saccamminida Lankester 1885 Order Hormosinida Mikhalevich 1980 Subclass Nodosariana Mikhalevich 1992 Order Biseriamminida Mikhalevich 1981 Order Delosinida Revets 1989 Order Lagenida Delage amp Herouard 1896 Order Palaeotextulariida Hohenegger amp Piller 1975 Order Polymorphinida Mikhalevich 1980 Order Vaginulinida Mikhalevich 1993 Order Nodosariida Calkins 1926 Class Spirillinata Mikhalevich 1992 Subclass Ammodiscana Mikhalevich 1980 Order Plagioraphida Mikhalevich 2003 Order Ammodiscida Mikhalevich 1980 Pseudoammodiscoida Conil amp Lys 1970 Order Ammovertellinida Mikhalevich 1999 Order Ataxophragmiida Fursenko 1958 Orbitolinida Ehrenberg 1839 Subclass Spirillinana Mikhalevich 1992 Superorder Archaediscoida Pojarkov amp Skvortsov 1979 Order Archaediscida Pojarkov amp Skvortsov 1979 Order Lasiodiscida Mikhalevich 1993 Order Tetrataxida Mikhalevich 1981 Superorder Involutinoida Hohenegger amp Piller 1977 Order Hottingerellida Mikhalevich 1993 Order Involutinida Hohenegger amp Piller 1977 Superorder Spirillinoida Hohenegger amp Piller 1975 Order Seabrookiida Mikhalevich 1980 Order Cymbaloporida Mikhaelevich 2013 Order Spirillinida Hohenegger amp Piller 1975 Order Patellinida Mikhalevich 1992 Class Miliolata Saidova 1981 porcelaneous foraminifers Subclass Schlumbergerinana Mikhalevich 1992 Order Lituotubida Mikhalevich 1992 Order Loftusiida Kaminski amp Mikhalevich 2004 Order Sphaeramminida Mikhalevich amp Kaminski 2004 Order Cyclolinida Mikhalevich 1992 Order Haplophragmiida Loeblich amp Tappan 1989 Order Schlumbergerinida Mikhalevich 1980 Rzehakinida Saidova 1981 Order Lituolida Lankester 1885 Subclass Miliolana Saidova 1981 Clade Fusulinoids Order Ozawainellida Solovieva 1980 Order Endothyroida Fursenko 1958 Order Tournayellida Hohenegger amp Piller 1973 Order Fusulinida Fursenko 1958 Order Neoschwagerinida Minato amp Honjo 1966 Order Schubertellida Skinner 1931 Order Schwagerinida Solovieva 1985 Order Staffellida Miklukho Maklay 1949 Clade Milioloids Order Costiferida Mikhalevich 1988 Order Squamulinida Mikhalevich 1988 Order Cornuspirida Jirovec 1953 Order Soritida Schultze 1854 Orbitolitida Wedekind 1937 Order Nubeculariida Jones 1875 Order Miliolida Delage amp Herouard 1896Anatomy edit nbsp Schematic diagram of a live multilocular foraminifera 1 endoplasm 2 ectoplasm 3 chamber 4 pores 5 foramen 6 food vacuole 7 nucleus 8 mitochondria 9 granureticulose pseudopodia 10 granules 11 primary aperture 12 food particle 13 Golgi apparatus 14 ribosomes The most striking aspect of most foraminifera are their hard shells or tests These may consist of one of multiple chambers and may be composed of protein sediment particles calcite aragonite or in one case silica 24 Some foraminifera lack tests entirely 32 Unlike other shell secreting organisms such as molluscs or corals the tests of foraminifera are located inside the cell membrane within the protoplasm The organelles of the cell are located within the compartment s of the test and the hole s of the test allow the transfer of material from the pseudopodia to the internal cell and back 33 The foraminiferal cell is divided into granular endoplasm and transparent ectoplasm from which a pseudopodial net may emerge through a single opening or through many perforations in the test Individual pseudopods characteristically have small granules streaming in both directions 34 Foraminifera are unique in having granuloreticulose pseudopodia that is their pseudopodia appear granular under the microscope these pseudopodia are often elongate and may split and rejoin each other These can be extended and retracted to suit the needs of the cell The pseudopods are used for locomotion anchoring excretion test construction and in capturing food which consists of small organisms such as diatoms or bacteria 35 33 Aside from the tests foraminiferal cells are supported by a cytoskeleton of microtubules which are loosely arranged without the structure seen in other amoeboids Forams have evolved special cellular mechanisms to quickly assemble and disassemble microtubules allowing for the rapid formation and retraction of elongated pseudopodia 24 In the gamont sexual form foraminifera generally have only a single nucleus while the agamont asexual form tends to have multiple nuclei In at least some species the nuclei are dimorphic with the somatic nuclei containing three times as much protein and RNA than the generative nuclei However nuclear anatomy seems to be highly diverse 36 The nuclei are not necessarily confined to one chamber in multi chambered species Nuclei can be spherical or have many lobes Nuclei are typically 30 50 µm in diameter 37 Some species of foraminifera have large empty vacuoles within their cells the exact purpose of these is unclear but they have been suggested to function as a reservoir of nitrate 37 Mitochondria are distributed evenly throughout the cell though in some species they are concentrated under the pores and around the external margin of the cell This has been hypothesised to be an adaptation to low oxygen environments 37 Several species of xenophyophore have been found to have unusually high concentrations of radioactive isotopes within their cells among the highest of any eukaryote The purpose of this is unknown 38 Ecology edit nbsp Photomicrographs of living planktonic foraminifera 39 1 Orbulina universa 2 Sphaeroidinella dehiscens 3 Globigerinoides sacculifer 4 Globigerinoides conglobatus 5 Globigerinoides ruber white 6 Globigerinoides ruber pink 7 Globoturborotalita rubescens 8 Globoturborotalita tenella 9 Globigerinella calida 10 Globigerinella siphonifera Type I 11 Globigerinella siphonifera Type II 12 Globigerinella adamsi 13 Globigerina bulloides 14 Turborotalita quinqueloba 15 Turborotalita humilis 16 Hastigerina pelagica 17 Hastigerinella digitata 18 Neogloboquadrina incompta 19 Neogloboquadrina pachyderma 20 Neogloboquadrina dutertrei 21 Pulleniatina obliquiloculata 22 Globorotalia inflata 23 Globorotalia menardii 24 Globorotalia scitula 25 Globorotalia crassaformis 26 Globorotalia truncatulinoides 27 Candeina nitida 28 Globigerinita glutinata 29 Globigerinita uvula and 30 Tenuitella fleisheri Scale bars 200 µmModern Foraminifera are primarily marine organisms but living individuals have been found in brackish freshwater 34 and even terrestrial habitats 7 The majority of the species are benthic and a further 50 morphospecies are planktonic 35 This count may however represent only a fraction of actual diversity since many genetically distinct species may be morphologically indistinguishable 40 Benthic foraminifera are typically found in fine grained sediments where they actively move between layers however many species are found on hard rock substrates attached to seaweeds or sitting atop the sediment surface 24 The majority of planktonic foraminifera are found in the globigerinina a lineage within the rotaliida 22 However at least one other extant rotaliid lineage Neogallitellia seems to have independently evolved a planktonic lifestyle 41 42 Further it has been suggested that some Jurassic fossil foraminifera may have also independently evolved a planktonic lifestyle and may be members of Robertinida 43 A number of forams both benthic and planktonic 44 45 have unicellular algae as endosymbionts from diverse lineages such as the green algae red algae golden algae diatoms and dinoflagellates 35 These mixotrophic foraminifers are particularly common in nutrient poor oceanic waters 46 Some forams are kleptoplastic retaining chloroplasts from ingested algae to conduct photosynthesis 47 Most foraminifera are heterotrophic consuming smaller organisms and organic matter some smaller species are specialised feeders on phytodetritus while others specialise in consuming diatoms Some benthic forams construct feeding cysts using the pseuodopodia to encyst themselves inside of sediment and organic particles 24 Certain foraminifera prey upon small animals such as copepods or cumaceans some forams even predate upon other forams drilling holes into the tests of their prey 48 One group the xenophyophores has been suggested to farm bacteria within their tests although studies have failed to find support for this hypothesis 49 Suspension feeding is also common in the group and at least some species can take advantage of dissolved organic carbon 24 A few foram species are parasitic infecting sponges molluscs corals or even other foraminifera Parasitic strategies vary some act as ectoparasites using their pseudopodia to steal food from the host while others burrow through the shell or body wall of their host to feed on its soft tissue 24 Foraminifera are themselves eaten by a host of larger organisms including invertebrates fish shorebirds and other foraminifera It has been suggested however that in some cases predators may be more interested in the calcium from foram shells than in the organisms themselves Several aquatic snail species are known to selectively feed upon foraminifera often even preferring individual species 50 Certain benthic foraminifera have been found to be capable of surviving anoxic conditions for over 24 hours indicating that they are capable of selective anaerobic respiration This is interpreted as an adaptation to survive changing oxygenic conditions near the sediment water interface 51 Foraminifera are found in the deepest parts of the ocean such as the Mariana Trench including the Challenger Deep the deepest part known At these depths below the carbonate compensation depth the calcium carbonate of the tests is soluble in water due to the extreme pressure The Foraminifera found in the Challenger Deep thus have no carbonate test but instead have one of organic material 52 Nonmarine foraminifera have traditionally been neglected in foram research but recent studies show them to be substantially more diverse than previously known They are known to inhabit disparate ecological niches including mosses rivers lakes and ponds wetlands soils peat bogs and sand dunes 53 Reproduction editThe generalized foraminiferal life cycle involves an alternation between haploid and diploid generations although they are mostly similar in form 23 54 The haploid or gamont initially has a single nucleus and divides to produce numerous gametes which typically have two flagella The diploid or agamont is multinucleate and after meiosis divides to produce new gamonts Multiple rounds of asexual reproduction between sexual generations are not uncommon in benthic forms 34 nbsp Diagram of a typical foraminiferan life cycle showing characteristic alternation of generations Foraminifera exhibit morphological dimorphism associated with their reproductive cycle The gamont or sexually reproducing haploid form is megalospheric that is its proloculus or first chamber is proportionally large The gamont is also known as the A form Gamonts despite having typically larger proloculi also generally have smaller overall test diameter than do agamonts After reaching maturity the gamont divides via mitosis to produce thousands of gametes which are also haploid These gametes all have a full set of organelles and are expelled from the test into the environment leaving the test undamaged Gametes are not differentiated into sperm and egg and any two gametes from a species can generally fertilize each other nbsp Morphs present in the foram life cycle the megalosphere and the microsphere The name derives from the size of the proloculus or first chamber and as such the microsphere has a larger overall size When two gametes combine they create a diploid multi nucleated cell known as the agamont or B form In contrast to the gamont the agamont is microspheric with a proportionally small first chamber but typically larger overall diameter with more chambers The agamont is the asexual reproduction phase of the foraminifera upon reaching adulthood the protoplasm entirely vacates the test and divides its cytoplasm meiotically via multiple fission to form a number of haploid offspring These offspring then begin to form their megalospheric first chamber before dispersing In some cases the haploid young may mature into a megalospheric form which then reproduces asexually to produce another megalospheric haploid offspring In this case the first megalospheric form is referred to as the schizont or A1 form while the second is referred to as the gamont or A2 form nbsp Fossil nummulitid foraminiferans showing microspheric larger and megalospheric individuals smaller Eocene of the United Arab Emirates scale in mmMaturation and reproduction occur more slowly in cooler and deeper water these conditions also cause forams to grow larger A forms always seem to be much more numerous than are B forms likely due to the reduced likelihood of two gametes encountering one another and successfully combining 55 33 Variations in reproductive mode edit There is a high degree of diversity in reproductive strategies in different foraminiferal groups In unilocular species the A form and B form are still present As in the microspheric morph of multilocular forams the asexually reproducing B form is larger than the sexually reproducing A form Forams in the family Spirillinidae have amoeboid gametes rather than flagellated Other aspects of reproduction in this group are generally similar to that of other groups of forams The calcareous spirillinid Patellina corrugata has a slightly different reproductive strategy than most other foraminifera The asexually reproducing B form produces a cyst that surrounds the entire cell it then divides within this cyst and the juvenile cells cannibalise the calcite of the parent s test to form the first chamber of their own test These A forms upon maturity gather into groups of up to nine individuals they then form a protective cyst around the whole group Gametogenesis occurs within this cyst producing very low numbers of gametes The B form larvae are produced inside of the cyst any nuclei that are not bound into cells are consumed as food for the developing larvae Patellina in A form is reportedly dioecious with sexes referred to as the plus and minus these sexes differ in number of nuclei with the plus form having three nuclei and the minus form having four nuclei The B form is again larger than the A form 33 55 48 Tests editMain article Foraminifera test See also Protist shell nbsp Foraminiferan tests ventral view Foraminiferal tests serve to protect the organism within Owing to their generally hard and durable construction compared to other protists the tests of foraminifera are a major source of scientific knowledge about the group Openings in the test that allow the cytoplasm to extend outside are called apertures 56 The primary aperture leading to the exterior take many different shapes in different species including but not limited to rounded crescent shaped slit shaped hooded radiate star shaped dendritic branching Some foraminifera have toothed flanged or lipped primary apertures There may be only one primary aperture or multiple when multiple are present they may be clustered or equatorial In addition to the primary aperture many foraminifera have supplemental apertures These may form as relict apertures past primary apertures from an earlier growth stage or as unique structures Test shape is highly variable among different foraminifera they may be single chambered unilocular or multi chambered multilocular In multilocular forms new chambers are added as the organism grows A wide variety of test morphologies is found in both unilocular and multilocular forms including spiraled serial and milioline among others 33 Many foraminifera exhibit dimorphism in their tests with megalospheric and microspheric individuals These names should not be taken as referring to the size of the full organism rather they refer to the size of the first chamber or proloculus Tests as fossils are known from as far back as the Ediacaran period 57 and many marine sediments are composed primarily of them For instance the limestone that makes up the pyramids of Egypt is composed almost entirely of nummulitic benthic Foraminifera 58 It is estimated that reef Foraminifera generate about 43 million tons of calcium carbonate per year 59 Genetic studies have identified the naked amoeba Reticulomyxa and the peculiar xenophyophores as foraminiferans without tests A few other amoeboids produce reticulose pseudopods and were formerly classified with the forams as the Granuloreticulosa but this is no longer considered a natural group and most are now placed among the Cercozoa 60 Evolutionary history editMolecular clocks indicate that the crown group of foraminifera likely evolved during the Neoproterozoic between 900 and 650 million years ago this timing is consistent with Neoproterozoic fossils of the closely related filose amoebae As fossils of foraminifera have not been found prior to the very end of the Ediacaran it is likely that most of these Proterozoic forms did not have hard shelled tests 61 62 Due to their non mineralised tests allogromiids have no fossil record 61 nbsp The mysterious Paleodictyon has been interpreted as a fossil xenophyophore but this remains controversial The mysterious vendozoans of the Ediacaran period have been suggested to represent fossil xenophyophores 63 However the discovery of diagenetically altered C27 sterols associated with the remains of Dickinsonia cast doubt on this identification and suggest it may instead be an animal 64 Other researchers have suggested that the elusive trace fossil Paleodictyon and its relatives may represent a fossil xenophyophore 65 and noted the similarity of the extant xenophyophore Occultammina to the fossil 66 however modern examples of Paleodictyon have not been able to clear up the issue and the trace may alternately represent a burrow or a glass sponge 67 Supporting this notion is the similar habitat of living xenophyophores to the inferred habitat of fossil graphoglyptids however the large size and regularity of many graphoglyptids as well as the apparent absence of xenophyae in their fossils casts doubt on the possibility 66 As of 2017 no definite xenophyophore fossils have been found 68 Test bearing foraminifera have an excellent fossil record throughout the Phanerozoic eon The earliest known definite foraminifera appear in the fossil record towards the very end of the Ediacaran these forms all have agglutinated tests and are unilocular These include forms like Platysolenites and Spirosolenites 69 57 Single chambered foraminifera continued to diversity throughout the Cambrian Some commonly encountered forms include Ammodiscus Glomospira Psammosphera and Turritellella these species are all agglutinated They make up part of the Ammodiscina a lineage of spirillinids that still contains modern forms 70 22 Later spirillinids would evolve multilocularity and calcitic tests with the first such forms appearing during the Triassic the group saw little effects on diversity due to the K Pg extinction 71 The earliest multi chambered foraminifera are agglutinated species and appear in the fossil record during the middle Cambrian period Due to their poor preservation they cannot be positively assigned to any major foram group 70 nbsp Cutaway view of a FusulinidThe earliest known calcareous walled foraminifera are the Fusulinids which appear in the fossil record during the Llandoverian epoch of the early Silurian The earliest of these were microscopic planispirally coiled and evolute later forms evolved a diversity of shapes including lenticular globular and elongated rice shaped forms 72 73 Later species of fusulinids grew to much larger size with some forms reaching 5 cm in length reportedly some specimens reach up to 14 cm in length making them among the largest foraminifera extant or extinct Fusulinids are the earliest lineage of foraminifera thought to have evolved symbiosis with photosynthetic organisms Fossils of fusulinids have been found on all continents except Antarctica they reached their greatest diversity during the Visean epoch of the Carboniferous The group then gradually declined in diversity until finally going extinct during the Permo Triassic extinction event 33 71 74 During the Tournaisian epoch of the Carboniferous Miliolid foraminifera first appeared in the fossil record having diverged from the spirillinids within the Tubothalamea Miliolids suffered about 50 casualties during both the Permo Triassic and K Pg extinctions but survived to the present day Some fossil miliolids reached up to 2 cm in diameter 71 nbsp A fossil test from a planktonic globigerininan foraminifera The earliest known Lagenid fossils appear during the Moscovian epoch of the Carboniferous Seeing little effect due to the Permo Triassic or K Pg extinctions the group diversified through time Secondarily unilocular taxa evolved during the Jurassic and Cretaceous The earliest Involutinid fossils appear during the Permian the lineage diversified throughout the Mesozoic of Eurasia before apparently vanishing from the fossil record following the Cenomanian Turonian Ocean Anoxic Event The extant group planispirillinidae has been referred to the involutinida but this remains the subject of debate 75 71 The Robertinida first appear in the fossil record during the Anisian epoch of the Triassic The group remained at low diversity throughout its fossil history all living representatives belong to the Robertinidae which first appeared during the Paleocene 71 The first definite Rotaliid fossils do not appear in the fossil record until the Pliensbachian epoch of the Jurassic following the Triassic Jurassic event 76 Diversity of the group remained low until the aftermath of the Cenomanian Turonian event after which the group saw a rapid diversification Of this group the planktonic Globigerinina the first known group of planktonic forams first appears in the aftermath of the Toarcian Turnover the group saw heavy losses during both the K Pg extinction and the Eocene Oligocene extinction but remains extant and diverse to this day 71 An additional evolution of planktonic lifestyle occurred in the Miocene or Pliocene when the rotaliid Neogallitellia independently evolved a planktonic lifestyle 41 42 Paleontological applications editDying planktonic Foraminifera continuously rain down on the sea floor in vast numbers their mineralized tests preserved as fossils in the accumulating sediment Beginning in the 1960s and largely under the auspices of the Deep Sea Drilling Ocean Drilling and International Ocean Drilling Programmes as well as for the purposes of oil exploration advanced deep sea drilling techniques have been bringing up sediment cores bearing Foraminifera fossils 77 The effectively unlimited supply of these fossil tests and the relatively high precision age control models available for cores has produced an exceptionally high quality planktonic Foraminifera fossil record dating back to the mid Jurassic and presents an unparalleled record for scientists testing and documenting the evolutionary process 77 The exceptional quality of the fossil record has allowed an impressively detailed picture of species inter relationships to be developed on the basis of fossils in many cases subsequently validated independently through molecular genetic studies on extant specimens 78 Because certain types of foraminifera are found only in certain environments their fossils can be used to figure out the kind of environment under which ancient marine sediments were deposited conditions such as salinity depth oxygenic conditions and light conditions can be determined from the different habitat preferences of various species of forams This allows workers to track changing climates and environmental conditions over time by aggregating information about the foraminifera present 79 In other cases the relative proportion of planktonic to benthic foraminifera fossils found in a rock can be used as a proxy for the depth of a given locality when the rocks were being deposited 80 nbsp Ten species of planktic foraminifera microfossils from Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum PETM sediments in southern Maryland 81 The scale bars measure 150 microns 0 015 cm Each specimen is similar in size to a grain of sand nbsp Climate change during the last 65 million years as expressed by the oxygen isotope composition of benthic foraminifera The Paleocene Eocene thermal maximum is characterized by a brief but prominent excursion attributed to rapid warming 82 83 84 Since at least 1997 the Paleocene Eocene thermal maximum PETM has been investigated as an analogy for understanding the effects of global warming and of massive carbon inputs to the ocean and atmosphere including ocean acidification 85 Humans today emit about 10 Gt of carbon about 37 Gt CO2e per year and at that rate will release a comparable amount to the PETM in about one thousand years A main difference is that during the PETM the planet was ice free as the Drake Passage had not yet opened and the Central American Seaway had not yet closed 86 Although the PETM is now commonly held to be a case study for global warming and massive carbon emission the cause details and overall significance of the event remain uncertain 87 88 89 90 nbsp Neoflabellina reticulata from chalk of Rugen Northeastern Germany Length 1 2 mm Age Upper lower MaastrichtianForaminifera have significant application in the field of biostratigraphy Due to their small size and hard shells foraminifera may be preserved in great abundance and with high quality of preservation due to their complex morphology individual species are easily recognizable Foraminifera species in the fossil record have limited ranges between the species first evolution and their disappearance stratigraphers have worked out the successive changes in foram assemblages throughout much of the Phanerozoic As such the assemblage of foraminifera within a given locality can be analyzed and compared to known dates of appearance and disappearance in order to narrow down the age of the rocks This allows paleontologists to interpret the age of sedimentary rocks when radiometric dating is not applicable 91 This application of foraminifera was discovered by Alva C Ellisor in 1920 92 nbsp Thin section of a peneroplid foraminiferan from Holocene lagoonal sediment in Rice Bay San Salvador Island Bahamas Scale bar 100 micrometresCalcareous fossil foraminifera are formed from elements found in the ancient seas where they lived Thus they are very useful in paleoclimatology and paleoceanography They can be used as a climate proxy to reconstruct past climate by examining the stable isotope ratios and trace element content of the shells tests Global temperature and ice volume can be revealed by the isotopes of oxygen and the history of the carbon cycle and oceanic productivity by examining the stable isotope ratios of carbon 93 see d18O and d13C The concentration of trace elements like strontium Sr 94 magnesium Mg 95 lithium Li 96 and boron B 97 also hold a wealth of information about global temperature cycles continental weathering and the role of the ocean in the global carbon cycle Geographic patterns seen in the fossil records of planktonic forams are also used to reconstruct ancient ocean currents Modern uses editThe oil industry relies heavily on microfossils such as forams to find potential hydrocarbon deposits 98 nbsp Ammonia beccarii a benthic foram from the North Sea For the same reasons they make useful biostratigraphic markers living foraminiferal assemblages have been used as bioindicators in coastal environments including indicators of coral reef health Because calcium carbonate is susceptible to dissolution in acidic conditions foraminifera may be particularly affected by changing climate and ocean acidification nbsp Foraminifera Baculogypsina sphaerulata of Hatoma Island Japan Field width 5 22 mmForaminifera have many uses in petroleum exploration and are used routinely to interpret the ages and paleoenvironments of sedimentary strata in oil wells 99 Agglutinated fossil foraminifera buried deeply in sedimentary basins can be used to estimate thermal maturity which is a key factor for petroleum generation The Foraminiferal Colouration Index 100 FCI is used to quantify colour changes and estimate burial temperature FCI data is particularly useful in the early stages of petroleum generation about 100 C Foraminifera can also be used in archaeology in the provenancing of some stone raw material types Some stone types such as limestone are commonly found to contain fossilised foraminifera The types and concentrations of these fossils within a sample of stone can be used to match that sample to a source known to contain the same fossil signature 101 Gallery edit nbsp Foraminifera of Pag Island Adriatic Sea 60 m field width 5 5 mm nbsp Foraminifera of Pag Island Adriatic Sea 60 m field width 5 5 mm nbsp Foraminifera of Pag Island Adriatic Sea 60 m field width 5 5 mm nbsp Foraminifera of Pag Island Adriatic Sea 60 m field width 5 5 mm nbsp Foraminifera of Indian Ocean south eastern coast of Bali field width 5 5 mm nbsp Foraminifera of Indian Ocean south eastern coast of Bali field width 5 5 mm nbsp Foraminifera of Indian Ocean south eastern coast of Bali field width 5 5 mm nbsp Foraminifera in Ngapali Myanmar field width 5 22 mm nbsp Foraminifera Heterostegina depressa field width 4 4 mmReferences edit Laura Wegener Parfrey Daniel J G Lahr Andrew H Knoll Laura A Katz 16 August 2011 Estimating the timing of early eukaryotic diversification with multigene molecular clocks PDF Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108 33 13624 9 Bibcode 2011PNAS 10813624P doi 10 1073 PNAS 1110633108 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 3158185 PMID 21810989 Wikidata Q24614721 Binczewska Anna Polovodova Asteman 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Eocene Thermal Maximum Science Advances American Association for the Advancement of Science AAAS 8 11 eabg1025 doi 10 1126 sciadv abg1025 ISSN 2375 2548 PMC 8926327 PMID 35294237 S2CID 247498325 Australia c AU o Australia Government ou Geoscience 15 May 2014 Biostratigraphy ga gov au Retrieved 20 July 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Cushman Joseph A Ellisor Alva C 1 January 1945 The Foraminiferal Fauna of the Anahuac Formation Journal of Paleontology 19 6 545 572 JSTOR 1299203 Zachos J C Pagani M Sloan L Thomas E Billups K 2001 Trends Rhythms and Aberrations in Global Climate 65 Ma to Present PDF Science 292 5517 686 693 Bibcode 2001Sci 292 686Z doi 10 1126 science 1059412 PMID 11326091 S2CID 2365991 Keul Nina Langer G Thoms S de Nooijer L J Reichart G J Bijma J April 2017 Exploring foraminiferal Sr Ca as a new carbonate system proxy PDF Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 202 374 386 doi 10 1016 j gca 2016 11 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Maturity and Burial Diagenesis in Fossil Foraminifers Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin Vol 499 Geological Survey of Canada ISBN 978 0 660 16451 9 Wilkinson Ian P Williams Mark Young Jeremy R Cook Samantha R Fulford Michael G Lott Graham K 1 August 2008 The application of microfossils in assessing the provenance of chalk used in the manufacture of Roman mosaics at Silchester Journal of Archaeological Science 35 8 2415 2422 doi 10 1016 j jas 2008 03 010 ISSN 0305 4403 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Foraminifera nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Foraminifera nbsp Look up Foraminifera or foraminifera in Wiktionary the free dictionary General informationThe University of California Museum of Paleontology website has an Introduction to the Foraminifera Researchers at the University of South Florida developed a system using Foraminifera for monitoring coral reef environments Archived 15 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine University College London s micropaleontology site has an overview of Foraminifera including many high quality SEMs Illustrated glossary of terms used in foraminiferal research Archived 21 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine is the Lukas Hottinger s glossary published in the OA e journal Carnets de Geologie Notebooks on Geology Archived 29 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine Information on Foraminifera Martin Langer s Micropaleontology Page Benthic Foraminifera information from the 2005 Urbino Summer School of PaleoclimatologyOnline flip booksIllustrated glossary of terms used in foraminiferal research by Lukas Hottinger alternative version of the one published in Carnets de Geologie Notebooks on Geology Archived 29 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine Resourcespforams mikrotax an online database detailing the taxonomy of planktonic foraminifera The star sand project part of micro scope is a cooperative database of information about Foraminifera 3D models of forams generated by X ray tomography CHRONOS has several Foraminifera resources including a taxon search page and a micro paleo section NB Most of this content is now included in the pforams mikrotax website eForams is a web site focused on Foraminifera and modeling of foraminiferal shells Foraminifera Gallery Illustrated catalog of recent and fossil Foraminifera by genus and locality Foraminifera NCBI Taxonomy Browser 29178 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Foraminifera amp oldid 1196811844, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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