Cloudina, Germs, 1972
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2010.0074 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E287D9-FFD0-FFFE-FCBC-ABC30EB2F92A |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Cloudina |
status |
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Cloudina View in CoL ex gr. C. riemkeae Germs, 1972
Fig. 3A, C–E View Fig .
Material.—Five etched specimens from the Kyyry−Ytyga locality, Yudoma River right bank, Yakutia−Sakha Republic, Russia (southeastern Siberian Platform); interval 10, Ust'− Yudoma Formation, Yudoma Group, upper Ediacaran.
Description.—Tubicolous, gently curving, sinuous, narrowly conical calcareous microfossil (up to 3 mm in length) consist−
http://dx.doi.org/10.4202/app.2010.0074
ing of eccentrically nested apically slightly flaring funnel−like segments (up to 10 segments per 1 mm of tube length). Segment width is relatively consistent and ranges from 0.20 mm (in its narrower lower part) to 0.25 mm in the same specimen, usually gradually increasing with increased length. The largest observed segment width is 0.50 mm. The tube inner surface is smooth. The primary composition of tubes is high−Mg calcite according to its present dolomitic composition and the presence of square holes probably formed after microdolomite crystal dissolution ( Fig. 3D View Fig ).
Remarks.—In its size range and relatively regular tube shape, Siberian Cloudina resembles Cloudina riemkeae Germs, 1972 from the Nama Group of Namibia and C. dunfeei Signor, Mount, and Onken, 1987 ( Signor et al. 1987: 4.1–4.14; = Coleolella sp. in Signor et al. 1983: fig. 3B) from the lower Deep Spring Formation in the White−Inyo Mountains of eastern California and Esmeralda County of western Nevada, USA, thus confirming Grant’s (1990) opinion on the synonymy of Nevadatubulus and Cloudina . However, differences in preservation of the material do not allow us to attribute our new specimens unequivocally to the Namibian species.
Among the last but not the least problems related to Cloudina is the question of predatory borings in its shells leading to far−reaching reconstructions of Neoproterozoic trophic webs and the basic phenomena caused the Cambrian explosive radiation. A number of such boring is discovered on Cloudina tubes from South China and Namibia ( Bengtson and Yue 1992; Brain 2001; Hua et al. 2003a). Despite the presence of some holes, the Siberian material points to another interpretation. Some tubes bear square holes rather than rounded ones ( Fig. 3C, D View Fig ) and even small fragments (0.8 × 0.3 mm) display three or more holes ( Fig. 3A, D View Fig ). Such structures are probably formed as a result of diagenetic dissolution of microdolomite crystals which formed at the tube surface due to its primary high−Mg calcite composition. Further diagenetic processes led to infilling of the holes in such a way that they finally became rounded in outline and resemble unsuccessful incomplete borings ( Fig. 3D View Fig ). Circular pits similar in both size and shape to Precambrian “borings” appeared on the calcareous cuticle of crustaceans during bacterial degradation ( Hof and Briggs 1997). No correlation between shell diameter and hole diameter was observed by Hua et al. (2003a) in Cloudina , and Sinotubulites from the same locality lacked any holes completely, probably, due to a differing primary mineralogy.
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