taxonID	type	description	language	source
CC4F0F4DFFB3655D32C9F907E466F8A6.taxon	description	(Plate 1, fig. 1)	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB3655D32C9F907E466F8A6.taxon	materials_examined	Material examined. Korea, off southern coast of Jeju, St. 7, 33 ° 00 ʹ 00 ʺ N, 127 ° 00 ʹ 00 ʺ E, 5 Aug 2019, by Smith-McIntyre grab, collected by Nayeon Park and Somin Lee. NIBR ID: NIBRPR 0000110833, MFORBK ID: MFORB K 00287.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB3655D32C9F907E466F8A6.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Test is large, free and consists of a central globular chamber and three radiating straight, tubular chambers with nearly uniform diameter. Three tubular chambers are on the same plane, and their ends are open to form apertures. Sutures are not distinct because of the attached sediment grains on test surface. Wall is agglutinated with fine to coarse sediment particles and surface is rough. Aperture is multiple, simple rounded, at the terminal of each tubular chamber. Test length is about 5 mm including tubular chambers.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB3655D32C9F907E466F8A6.taxon	discussion	Remarks. This species is the type species of the genus Rhabdammina, and this is the first record of the genus in Korea. There are 25 recent species belonging to the genus Rhabdammina, and the present species is quite similar to R. linearis in that it has the central globular chamber with tubular chambers. However, R. linearis has only two tubular chambers extending in opposite directions while R. abyssorum has more than three radiating chambers. According to previous reports, the genus Rhabdammina is related to low temperature and deep water depth. The depth of the type locality of R. abyssorum is 823.5 m (450 fathom) and has been reported from deep waters worldwide: from 130 - 3220 m in the North Pacific Ocean (Cushman, 1910; Zheng and Fu, 2001), 150 - 3742 m in the Atlantic Ocean (Cushman, 1918), 48 - 3171 m in the Laptev Sea (Lukina, 2001), and 71.1 - 386 m from the Turkish coasts of the east Aegean Sea (Meriç et al., 2004). The present Korean specimen was collected at a depth of 103 m, which is quite shallow, but within the previously reported distribution depth range. This species can have more than three tubular chambers, and the color and grain size vary depending on the materials composing the test (Brady, 1884; Cushman, 1910; Loeblich and Tappan, 1987). Particularly, referred to Cushman (1910; 1918), the materials composing the test wall depend to the bottom sediment condition, and specimens from shallower depth tend to be composed of coarse sediment grains. The present specimen is composed of relatively coarser particles than those reported in other regions. The shallow water specimen reported from the coast of Japan by Cushman (1910) is also composed of coarse granules.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB3655D32C9F907E466F8A6.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Korea, China, Japan, New Zealand, Sea of Marmara, Bay of Biscay, Aegean Sea, Turkey, Norway, Gulf of Saint Lawrence, United States, Cuba, Laptev Sea.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB3655F3166F8A5E547FEB2.taxon	description	Order Ammodiscida Mikhalevich, 1980 Family Ammolagenidae Kaminski, Henderson, Cetean & Waśkowska, 2009	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB1655F32C9FE50E3A3FE52.taxon	description	(Plate 1, fig. 2 a - b)	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB1655F32C9FE50E3A3FE52.taxon	materials_examined	Material examined. Korea, off southhern coast of Jeju, St. 7, 33 ° 00 ʹ 00 ʺ N, 127 ° 00 ʹ 00 ʺ E, 5 Aug 2019, by Smith-McIntyre grab, collected by Nayeon Park and Somin Lee. NIBR ID: NIBRPR 0000110834, MFORBK ID: MFORB K 00332.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB1655F32C9FE50E3A3FE52.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Test consists of a large, oval proloculus and narrow tubular rectilinear second chamber, and attached to substrate such as shell fragments, sediment particles, or other foraminiferal tests. Wall is finely agglutinated, and surface is smooth, glossy and yellowish-brown in color. Primary aperture is simple, round, and at the end of tubular chamber. Secondary aperture is at the basal end of proloculus and surrounded by slight lip. Test length is about 270 μm, width is about 42 μm including the tubular second chamber.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB1655F32C9FE50E3A3FE52.taxon	discussion	Remarks. This species is the type species of genus Ammolagena, and this is the first report of the genus in Korea. Ammolagena clavata was originally described as a variety of Trochammina irregularis by Jones and Parker (1860), and later Eimer and Fickert (1839) added the species into the genus Ammolagena. There are three species belonging to the genus Ammolagena and the present species differs from the others in terms of its larger size, less slender, inflated, rounded shape, and much finer particles composing the wall. According to Kaminski and Gradstein (2005), the definition of this species and the genus Ammolagena needs to be amended to consider the presence of a secondary aperture at the basal end. There is no report about the supplementary aperture in the descriptions by Loeblich and Tappan (1987), and the original description by Jones and Parker (1860). However, specimens reported by other researchers often have the secondary aperture at the base (Wright, 1891). The present specimen also has a secondary aperture at the basal end. The length of the tubular chamber differs from individual to individual. The present specimen has a short tubular chamber, and most similar to the specimen reported by Wright (1891).	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB1655F32C9FE50E3A3FE52.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Korea, China, Japan, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Aegean Sea, Bay of Biscay, Mediterranean Sea, Celtic Sea, Norway, United States.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB1655F3170FD5EE252F886.taxon	description	(Plate 1, fig. 3 a - b)	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB1655F3170FD5EE252F886.taxon	materials_examined	Material examined. Korea: off southhern coast of Jeju, St. 6, 33 ° 00 ʹ 00 ʺ N, 126 ° 30 ʹ 00 ʺ E, 5 Aug 2019, by Smith-McIntyre grab, collected by Nayeon Park and Somin Lee. NIBR ID: NIBRPR 0000110836, MFORBK ID: MFORB K 00281.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB1655F3170FD5EE252F886.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Test is large, elongated, uniserial, rectilinear, and slightly tapering toward basal end. Chamber height is increasing as added. Sutures are straight and right-angled to the vertical axis. Surface is ornamented by strong, raised longitudinal costae extending from basal spine to around the aperture of final chamber. Basal spine is slightly oblique to vertical axis. Wall is calcareous and hyaline with smooth and glossy surface. Aperture is terminal, radiate, and slightly produced outward. Test length is about 3.5 mm including the basal spine.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB1655F3170FD5EE252F886.taxon	discussion	Remarks. This species was originally identified as Nodosaria raphanus by Brady (1884), then Boomgaart (1949) proposed this species as a new species with a new name, Nodosaria bradyi in his doctoral dissertation based on the inconsistency between the type figures of N. raphanus and Brady’s specimens. Later, Thalmann (1950) reported a new name, Nodosaria lamnulifera because N. bradyi was a homonym of Dentalina bradyi Spandel, 1901 = Nodosaria (Dentalina) bradyi (Spandel). Nodosaria lamnulifera differs from N. raphanus based on the fewer longitudinal costae, non-lobulate periphery and less tapering test. The present specimen is most similar to the specimen of figure 7 in plate 64 reported by Brady (1884), and has a slightly more produced aperture than other specimens (figs. 6, 8 - 10) in Brady’s plate.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB1655F3170FD5EE252F886.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Korea, New Zealand, Fiji, Aegean Sea.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB6655832F7F885E36DF9C4.taxon	description	(Plate 1, fig. 5 a - c)	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB6655832F7F885E36DF9C4.taxon	materials_examined	Material examined. Korea, off southhern coast of Jeju, St. 10, 32 ° 30 ʹ 00 ʺ N, 127 ° 00 ʹ 00 ʺ E, 8 Aug 2019, by Smith-McIntyre grab, collected by Nayeon Park and Somin Lee. NIBR ID: NIBRPR 0000110837, MFORBK ID: MFOR BK 00222.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB6655832F7F885E36DF9C4.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Test is biconvex, high trochospiral consisting of about three whorls. Spiral side is evolute and conical with broadly rounded apex. Umbilical side is involute, consisting seven to eight chambers, and less convex than the spiral side. Periphery is rounded, circular and thickened by keel. Sutures of both sides are conspicuously limbate and imperforate. Sutures on the umbilical side tend to be stronger near the center. Wall is calcareous, hyaline, and densely perforated except the sutures. Aperture is interiomarginal, extraumbilical with a slight lip. Test diameter is about 1.1 mm.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB6655832F7F885E36DF9C4.taxon	discussion	Remarks. The original name of this species, Eponides bradyi Le Calvez was a junior homonym of Eponides bradyi Earland, and later accepted to Neoeponides bradyi (Le Calvez) by Rögl and Hansen (1984). Based on the original descriptions and previous reports, this species is most similar to N. procerus, among other congeneric species in having high trochospiral, conical test with round- ed apex (Ellis and Messina, 1940; Hottinger et al., 1993; Szarek, 2001; Hayward et al., 2010). However, N. procerus has a flat, truncated umbilical face and higher conical spiral side with a larger number of whorls than those in N. bradyi. Additionally, the sutures of N. procerus are indistinct unlike those of N. bradyi. The present Korean specimen is most similar to the specimen reported by Szarek (2001) from the Sunda Shelf.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB6655832F7F885E36DF9C4.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Korea, Sunda Shelf, New Caledonia, Maldives, Papua New Guinea.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB6655832F7FE50E5EFF925.taxon	description	(Plate 1, fig. 4 a - b)	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB6655832F7FE50E5EFF925.taxon	materials_examined	Material examined. Korea, off southern coast of Jeju, St. 10, 32 ° 30 ʹ 00 ʺ N, 127 ° 00 ʹ 00 ʺ E, 8 Aug 2019, by Smith-McIntyre grab, collected by Nayeon Park and Somin Lee. NIBR ID: NIBRPR 0000110835, MFORBK ID: MFOR BK 00221.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB6655832F7FE50E5EFF925.taxon	diagnosis	Diagnosis. Test is large, elongate, sub-ovate, rounded in cross-section, and tapering toward a blunt point at the basal end. Chamber arrangement is triserial in early portion, later becomes loose and almost uniserial. Sutures are distinct, depressed, and somewhat oblique. Surface is ornamented by irregular longitudinal costae. Wall is calcareous, perforate, and the surface is somewhat glassy. Aperture is rounded at the terminal of short neck and surrounded by lip. The area around the neck on the final chamber is slightly depressed. Test length is about 930 μm, including neck.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB6655832F7FE50E5EFF925.taxon	discussion	Remarks. Uvigerina schwageri was originally reported from the Fiji Islands by Brady (1884). This species is similar to U. bermudezi in general appearance, but the latter has a more ovate, stout outline and blunt basal end than U. schwageri. Szarek (2001) reported two morphotypes of this species presumed to represent the megalospheric and microspheric form. One is the type with large test, broad basal end, and widely spaced costae. The other type has much smaller and slender test with small, sharply pointed initial end, and more narrowly spaced costae. The same aspect seems to be observed in the specimens of Loeblich and Tappan (1994). The present specimen has a somewhat more pointed basal end than the specimens in Hatta and Ujiie (1992; pl. 27, fig. 7), and Szarek (2001; p. 18, fig. 16).	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
CC4F0F4DFFB6655832F7FE50E5EFF925.taxon	distribution	Distribution. Korea, Japan, China, Philippines, Fiji.	en	Lee, Somin Lee and Wonchoel (2020): Five newly recorded foraminifera from off the southern coast of Jeju Island, Korea. Journal of Species Research 9 (4): 473-479, DOI: 10.12651/JSR.2020.9.4.473
