Callospiriferina Rousselle, 1977

Macfarlan, Donald Alexander Bankier, 2023, Latest Triassic and Early Jurassic Spiriferinida (Brachiopoda) of Zealandia (New Zealand and New Caledonia), Zootaxa 5277 (1), pp. 1-58 : 18-19

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5277.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:9273881B-D09E-4958-B1CD-59E97339BF32

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7891518

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD87E3-FFDB-FF92-FF5D-50FD3E18C74F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Callospiriferina Rousselle, 1977
status

 

Callospiriferina Rousselle, 1977

1977 Callospiriferina Rousselle , p. 157.

2006 Callospiriferina Rousselle, 1977 ; Carter, p. 1924.

2013 Callospiriferina Rousselle, 1977 ; Alméras & Cougnon, p. 21.

Type Species: Spirifer tumidus von Buch, 1837 ( OD) .

The genus Callospiriferina was proposed by Rousselle (1977) to include spiriferinides with rounded costae of moderate strength, and with dental plates enveloped in callus.

The three previously described Zealandian species all have costae of variable strength, from barely perceptible to low and bluntly rounded, and which are much weaker or absent on the flanks. Callus is developed to some extent on C. kawhiana ( Trechmann, 1918) , but not on the other two species, which in general have more delicate internal plates on the ventral valve.

Callospiriferina is known from Spain ( Alméras & Fauré 2000), France ( Alméras & Fauré 2000, Alméras and Cougnon 2013), Portugal ( Alméras et al. 1996), Italy (Taddei Ruggiero & V̂r̂s 1987), Austria ( Boehm et al. 1999, Siblík 1999), Hungary ( Dulai 1992, 2003), the Balkans ( Radulovic 1995), Britain ( Hollingworth et al. 1990), Morocco ( Rousselle 1977), Algeria ( Alméras et al. 2007), Alaska ( Sandy & Blodgett 2000) and Argentina ( Manceñido 1981, Damborenea & Manceñido 1992). The genus is reviewed, mainly from a western European perspective by Alméras & Cougnon (2013). It has not previously been recorded from the Late Triassic.

Spiriferina krumbecki Wanner & Knipscheer from the Early Jurassic of Seram (Wanner & Knipscheer 1951) has weakly developed costae and is of comparable size and shape to C. ongleyi and may belong to Callospiriferina . World distribution of Callospiriferina is shown in Fig. 6 View FIGURE 6 .

Wright & Campbell (1990) recognised that Mentzelia kawhiana and Spiriferina ongleyi were congeneric. Wright (1990) showed sections of internal moulds of “ M.” kawhiana and “M.” ongleyi , made with sections parallel to the anterior commissure. No section intervals are stated. The spiralia are shown clearly, but the sections are difficult to interpret.

Grant-Mackie et al. (2000) and MacFarlan et al. (2009) also included Spiriferina radiata ( Hector, 1886) in Mentzelia , indicating that the three commonest latest Triassic–Early Jurassic spiriferinides in Zealandia are congeneric.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Brachiopoda

Class

Rhynchonellata

Order

Spiriferinida

SubOrder

Spiriferinidina

SuperFamily

Pennospiriferinoidea

Family

Pennospiriferinidae

SubFamily

Pennospiriferininae

Loc

Callospiriferina Rousselle, 1977

Macfarlan, Donald Alexander Bankier 2023
2023
Loc

Callospiriferina

Rousselle 1977
1977
Loc

Callospiriferina

Rousselle 1977
1977
Loc

Callospiriferina

Rousselle 1977
1977
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF