WoRMS name details
Quinqueloculina partschii d'Orbigny, 1846
737250 (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:737250)
unaccepted (Opinion of Cimerman and Langer (1991))
Species
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
Orbigny, A. D. d'. (1846). Die fossilen Foraminiferen des tertiären Beckens von Wien. Foraminifères fossiles du bassin tertiaire de Vienne. 312 p., available online at https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_JKpAAAAAcAAJ
page(s): p. 293 pl. 19 fig. 4-6 [details]
page(s): p. 293 pl. 19 fig. 4-6 [details]
Hayward, B.W.; Le Coze, F.; Vachard, D.; Gross, O. (2025). World Foraminifera Database. Quinqueloculina partschii d'Orbigny, 1846. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=737250 on 2025-04-05
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Nomenclature
original description
Orbigny, A. D. d'. (1846). Die fossilen Foraminiferen des tertiären Beckens von Wien. Foraminifères fossiles du bassin tertiaire de Vienne. 312 p., available online at https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_JKpAAAAAcAAJ
page(s): p. 293 pl. 19 fig. 4-6 [details]
page(s): p. 293 pl. 19 fig. 4-6 [details]
Other
additional source
Papp, A. and Schmid, M.E. (1985). The fossil foraminifera of the Tertiary Basin of Vienna. Revision of the monograph by Alcide d'Orbigny (1846). <em>Abhandlungen der Geologischen Bundesanstalt.</em> 37, 311 p., available online at https://opac.geologie.ac.at/ais312/dokumente/AB0037_001_A.pdf
note: Given as a synonym of Q. peregrina [details] Available for editors
[request]
note: Given as a synonym of Q. peregrina [details] Available for editors






From editor or global species database
Synonymy As well documented by Vénec-Peyré and Poignant (2010), Papp and Schmid (1985) based their revision of d'Orbigny's Foraminifera from the Vienna basin (1846) only on one of the four existing collections namely the rediscovered Vienna collection while the syntypes are to be found in Paris (MNHN).Papp and Schmid put Quinqueloculina partschii into synonymy with Q. peregrina on this sole basis.
The stratigraphic range of those two species differs; Q. peregrina being a Miocene species with no known recent record while Q. partschii has been described from the Miocene with numerous recent records especially in the Mediterranean sea where it is accepted in the genus Adelosina since Cimerman and Langer (1991). [details]