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Foraminifera

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November 17, 2025

Prelims: Current events of national and international importance

Why in News?

Global review identifies 57 new living species of tiny marine Foraminifera, including three from New Zealand waters.

  • Classification & Nature - Foraminifera are single-celled protists (eukaryotes) belonging to the supergroup Rhizaria.
  • They have granuloreticulose pseudopodia, thread-like extensions used for feeding, movement, and building their shells.
  • Shell (“Test”) - Many foraminifera build a shell, called a test, which can have one or multiple chambers.
  • The composition of the test varies, common materials include calcium carbonate (calcite or aragonite), agglutinated sediment particles, chitin, or sometimes silica.
  • These tests often have openings (pores) that connect different chambers (“foramen” means “hole-bearer”).
  • Ecology / Habitat - Marine - The majority of foraminifera are marine.
  • Benthic vs. Planktonic - Benthic forams live on or in seafloor sediments (macro-, meio-, micro-benthos).
  • Planktonic forams float in the water column; many belong to the suborder Globigerinina.
  • Other environments- Some foraminifera are found in brackish or freshwater, and a few even in terrestrial/soil environments.
  • Reproduction & Life Cycle - Forams generally have an alternation of generations- sexual (haploid) and asexual (diploid) phases.
  • Importance in Science
    • Fossil record - Foraminifera have an extensive fossil record, it makes them very useful in biostratigraphy (dating rock layers) and paleoclimatology (reconstructing past climates).
    • Environmental indicators - Because different foram species prefer different environmental conditions (e.g., temperature, salinity, depth), they are used as indicators of past and present marine conditions.
    • Carbonate production - Their calcium carbonate shells contribute significantly to marine sediments.
    • Size & Diversity - There are thousands of species estimates suggest 6,700–10,000 living species and many more fossil species.
    • Size-wise, many are small (less than 1 mm), but some species’ tests can grow much larger (up to ~20 cm for rare species).
  • Significance
    • Climate Research - Because forams record chemical signatures in their shells (e.g., isotope ratios), scientists use them to infer past ocean temperatures, ice volume, and even CO₂ levels.
    • Oil Exploration - Foraminifera fossils help geologists date and correlate sedimentary rock layers, which is crucial in hydrocarbon exploration.
    • Marine Ecology - They’re part of marine food webs and carbon cycling.

Reference

Phys | Foraminifera

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