World Foraminifera Database
Citation
Hayward, B. W., Le Coze, F., Vachard, D., & Gross, O. (2024). World Foraminifera Database (version 2024-11-01). In O. Bánki, Y. Roskov, M. Döring, G. Ower, D. R. Hernández Robles, C. A. Plata Corredor, T. Stjernegaard Jeppesen, A. Örn, T. Pape, D. Hobern, S. Garnett, H. Little, R. E. DeWalt, K. Ma, J. Miller, T. Orrell, R. Aalbu, J. Abbott, C. Aedo, et al., Catalogue of Life (Version 2024-11-18). Catalogue of Life, Amsterdam, Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.48580/dgjy9-3dxDescription
This World Database of all species of Foraminifera ever described, is part of the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS), a global initiative to provide a register of all marine organisms. Foraminifera (‘hole bearers’) or forams for short, are a large phylum of amoeboid protozoans (single celled) with reticulating pseudopods, fine strands of cytoplasm that branch and merge to form a dynamic net. They usually produce a test (or shell) which can have one or more chambers, and are made of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) or mineral grains or other particles glued together. The tests are usually less than 0.5 mm in size, but the largest can be up to 20 cm across. Foraminifera are among the most abundant and scientifically important groups of marine organisms. The tests of recently dead planktic foraminifera are so abundant that they form a thick blanket over one third of the surface of the Earth (as Globigerina ooze on the ocean floor). Foraminifera are essentially marine- and estuarine-dwelling protozoans living in all environments from the greatest depths right up to highest astronomical tide level and from the equator to the poles. The importance of foraminifera comes from the use of their fossil tests in biostratigraphy, paleoenvironmental studies, and isotope geochemistry. Their ubiquity in most marine sedimentary rocks, often as large, well-preserved, diverse assemblages, has resulted in their being the most studied group of fossils worldwide. Because modern foraminifera have attracted little interest from biologists, paleontologists have been forced to undertake most studies, including genetic research, on the living fauna. This site has the following aims: to provide a catalogue of the world's foraminiferal species to promote stability in foraminiferal nomenclature to act as a tool for higher taxonomic revisions and regional monographs
Taxonomic Coverages
Geographic Coverages
Bibliographic Citations
Contacts
Bruce W. Haywardeditor
email: b.hayward@geomarine.org.nz
userId: http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1302-7686
François Le Coze
editor
email: info@marinespecies.org
Daniel Vachard
editor
Onno Gross
editor
email: info@deepwave.org
administrative point of contact
Geomarine Research
NZ
administrative point of contact
WoRMS Editorial Board
administrative point of contact
Deepwave
DE
administrative point of contact
Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee
BE
Bruce W. Hayward
administrative point of contact
email: b.hayward@geomarine.org.nz