Abstract
This paper presents a comprehensive survey of benthic foraminifera from shallow waters of the Apapa-Badagry Creek estuary in southwestern Nigeria. Sediments of the Apapa-Badagry Creek, an important estuary surrounded by sprawling estates and industrial parks, yielded diverse assemblages of benthic foraminifera with a total of eighty-eight species. They include hyaline-perforate taxa which dominated the inner western sites around the Lagos Harbor in the Apapa Creek with Ammonia aoteana, A. tepida, A. convexa, Ammonia sp. 1, Ammonia sp. 2. Agglutinated taxa are well established in the westernmost areas in the Badagry Creek, where there is seamless fresh-water mixing, with high populations of Ammotium salsum and few occurrences of Milliamina fusca and Ammobaculites species. The miliolids, represented mainly by species of Quinqueloculina, occupy sample stations in the Commodore Channel which flourish under conditions of marine and tidal influences. Cribroelphidium mirum, Pararotalia sarmientoi, Bolivina striatula and Rosalina species are also found within the Commodore Channel sediments. Our study widely extends and completes previous studies from the tropical eastern Atlantic, especially within the Gulf of Guinea and provides new information on the distribution, diversity, and species richness of shallow-water benthic foraminifera fringing the Atlantic coast of Africa.
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