Schellwienella ornata Demanet, 1934
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26879/758 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8541AA1E-F9DE-4079-AE09-918FFF61ADC1 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03818787-FFDF-FF9F-2A4A-8FBAFB3B6A7F |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Schellwienella ornata Demanet, 1934 |
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Schellwienella ornata Demanet, 1934
Figures 4 View FIGURE 4 , 15 View FIGURE 15
v* 1934 Schellwienella ornata nov. sp. Demanet, p. 83, text-fig. 16, pl. 7, figs. 4-5.
Type material. The complete internal mould ( RBINS a5922) illustrated by Demanet (1934, pl. 7, fig. 4) is selected herein as the lectotype ( Figure 15.1-8 View FIGURE 15 ) whereas the specimen ( RBINS a5923) figured by Demanet (1934, pl. 7, fig. 5, text-fig. 16) and of which the ventral umbo has been sectioned by him, is selected as the paralectotype ( Figure 15.9-14 View FIGURE 15 ). Both specimens were considered as paratypes by Demanet (1934). Until now, although Demanet (1934, p. 84) reported other specimens assigned to his new species, only the types have been recovered.
Description. Shell medium-sized (up to 41.8 mm in width), markedly ventribiconvex, subquadrate in outline, with maximum width near midlength; hinge line clearly shorter than maximum width; cardinal margins rounded; anterior margin straight or depressed; anterior margin rectimarginate or vaguely undulose.
Ventral valve moderately inflated, with flanks sloping moderately towards lateral commissure; umbo not prominent (at least in internal mould) beak straight; interarea irregularly triangular (deformation due to cementation on an organic or inorganic substrate), high, flat, apsacline; perideltidium flat; pseudodeltidium narrow, strongly convex; cementation cicatrix only preserved in lectotype.
Dorsal valve slightly convex, with maximum height near mid-valve then slightly decreasing towards anterior margin; interarea linear, flat, anacline; shallow median depression originating near posterior margin developed in one specimen.
Ornamentation parvicostellate ( Figure 15.14 View FIGURE 15 ); costellae increasing by intercalation, 6–7 costae per 5 mm near front separated from each other 5–6 costellae; growth varices developed; filae absent.
Ventral interior ( Figure 15.1-2 View FIGURE 15 , 5 View FIGURE 5 , 7 View FIGURE 7 ) with thin dental plates diverging at an angle of 35–37 degrees; teeth small; muscle field not excavated, obscure.
Dorsal interior ( Figure 15.3 View FIGURE 15 , 7-8 View FIGURE 7 View FIGURE 8 ) with posteriorly grooved cardinal process lobes; socket ridges recurved, widely divergent; muscle field slightly excavated, obscure but well-defined posteriorly by lateral ridges extending from the socket ridges.
Remarks. Despite the availability of the type material illustrated by Demanet (1934), Schellwienella ornata remains incompletely known as its intraspecific variability cannot be investigated. Its main features are the parvicostellate ornamentation devoid of filae and the slightly divergent dental plates, which are not without evocating the genus Pulsia Ivanov, 1925 , but the latter is characterized by parallel dental plates whereas Schellwienella encompasses species with dental plates variably divergent from hinge line ( McIntosh, 1974). Schellwienella ornata differs from S. crenistria ( Phillips, 1836) by the absence of filae, its quadro-rounded outline, and its narrow hinge line (the maximum width is near midlength vs. close to the hinge). According to Demanet (1934), his species is very similar to Orthis cylindrica M’Coy, 1844 from the Visean (Brigantian) of Castle Espie (Comber, Co. Down, Ireland). M’Coy’s (1844, pl. 22, fig. 1) original specimen was illustrated by Davidson (1861, pl. 27, fig. 9), and this species was considered as probable Schellwienella representative by Thomas (1910, p. 127). Furthermore, Orthis cylindrica was considered as a variety of Schellwienella crenistria ( Phillips, 1836) by Davidson (1861, p. 128; 1880, p. 290). Note that the specimens from the Serpukhovian of Scotland (base of the Millstone Grit Series) identified as Streptorhynchus crenistria var. cylindrica M‘Coy and illustrated by Davidson (1880: pl. 37, figs. 6–7) have been assigned to Schellwienella rotundata Thomas, 1910 and Orthothetina cf. thomasi (Sokolskaya in Sarytcheva and Sokolskaya, 1952) by McIntosh (1974: 204, 209), respectively. The only specimen illustrated by M‘Coy (1844) cannot be found in the Griffith collections curated at the National Museum of Ireland, but there is a dorsal valve (NMING:F6267) ( Figure 16 View FIGURE 16 ) from the same locality which matches M’Coy’s description; thus it is herein selected as lectotype for nomenclatorial purposes. The type specimens of Demanet’s (1934) species have a markedly less convex dorsal valve and a thinner radial ornamentation. Thomas (1971) noted the similarities between the ornamentation of S. ornata and those of S. reprinki Sokolskaya (in Sarytcheva and Sokolskaya, 1952) (see also Sokolskaya, 1954) and S. weaberensis Thomas, 1971 .
Occurrence. The type specimens were recovered from the Visé Formation at Visé according to Demanet (1934), who also reported the species in the ‘calcschistes de Warnant’ in the Condroz sedimentation area, corresponding now to the Upper Member of the Anhée Formation (see Poty et al., 2002) (late Warnantian; Figure 4 View FIGURE 4 ). However, Demanet (1958) did not report this species anymore within the Anhée Formation.
RBINS |
Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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