Ceratobairdia sexagintaduella Forel, 2021

Tarnac, Anaëlle, Forel, Marie-Béatrice, Nestell, Galina, Nestell, Merlynd & Crasquin, Sylvie, 2021, Middle Permian ostracods (Crustacea) from the Guadalupe Mountains, West Texas, USA, European Journal of Taxonomy 770, pp. 1-60 : 36-37

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2021.770.1499

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:33F92DB8-3122-4F8E-995B-DBF260B3E390

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5536091

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E353B465-EF88-46B2-A3E0-5C7C3B2AB411

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:E353B465-EF88-46B2-A3E0-5C7C3B2AB411

treatment provided by

Felipe (2021-09-29 12:26:51, last updated 2024-11-26 00:56:05)

scientific name

Ceratobairdia sexagintaduella Forel
status

sp. nov.

Ceratobairdia sexagintaduella Forel sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:E353B465-EF88-46B2-A3E0-5C7C3B2AB411

Figs 5F View Fig , 9D–J View Fig

Diagnosis

A species of Ceratobairdia with a lamellar overlap of LV over RV and a curved latero-ventral ridge delimiting a flat venter lacking a posterior spine.

Etymology

From the Latin ‘s exaginta duo ’, meaning ‘62’, referring to the location of the studied sections along the Highway 62.

Material examined

Holotype USA • complete carapace, ( Fig. 9D View Fig ); Guadalupe Mountains , West Texas, Williams Ranch Member , Cutoff Formation , Quarry section, sample GM1; Roadian, Middle Permian; MNHN.F. F63440 View Materials .

Paratype USA • 1 left valve, ( Fig. 9E View Fig ); Guadalupe Mountains , West Texas, Williams Ranch Member , Cutoff Formation , Quarry section, sample GM1; Roadian, Middle Permian; MNHN.F. F63441 View Materials .

Additional material

USA • 1 left valve; Guadalupe Mountains , West Texas, Williams Ranch Member, Cutoff Formation , Quarry section, sample GM1; Roadian, Middle Permian; MNHN.F. F63442 View Materials 1 complete carapace; same locality as for preceding; Roadian, Middle Permian; MNHN.F. F63443 View Materials 1 left valve; same locality as for preceding; Roadian, Middle Permian; MNHN.F. F63444 View Materials 1 complete carapace; same locality as for preceding; Roadian, Middle Permian; MNHN.F. F63445 View Materials 1 left valve; same locality as for preceding; Roadian, Middle Permian; MNHN.F. F63446 View Materials 29 complete carapaces, 368 valves; Guadalupe Mountains , West Texas, Williams Ranch Member, Cutoff Formation, Quarry section, samples GM1, GM2; Roadian, Middle Permian; MNHN.F. F63496 View Materials .

Dimensions

L= 753–1488 µm; H =389–925 µm ( Fig. 5F View Fig , not all valves measured, all RV correspond to complete carapaces).

Description

Massive carapace (H/L= 0.58–0.71); AB with small radius of curvature and maximum located at mid-H, dorsal part of AB forms a right angle with ADB at RV; VB straight at RV and convex at LV; PB short, with small radius of curvature located in lower ⅓ rd of Hmax; latero-ventral ridge developed along the VB; strong overlap of LV on RV particularly at DB developed into blade; surface smooth.

Occurrence

Samples GM1, GM2, Quarry section, Williams Ranch Member, Cutoff Formation, Guadalupe Mountains, West Texas, USA, Roadian, Middle Permian (this work).

Remarks

Ceratobairdia sexagintaduella sp. nov. is similar to Bairdia monstrabilis Cooper, 1946 from the Pennsylvanian of Illinois ( Cooper 1946) but differs by a shorter carapace, a shorter latero-ventral ridge and the presence of a blade along the dorsal overlap at LV. Noteworthy, Sohn (1954) considered that Bairdia monstrabilis Cooper, 1946 does not belong to Ceratobairdia mainly because of the lack of a dorsal structure at LV. Lobobairdia ventriconcava ( Chen, 1958) in Chen & Bao, 1986 from the Early Permian of South China ( Chen & Bao 1986) is similar to Ceratobairdia sexagintaduella sp. nov., but has an even shorter latero-ventral ridge and lacks the dorsal blade at LV. The morphology of the latero-ventral ridge in Ceratobairdia sexagintaduella sp. nov. is similar to that of Ceratobairdia sinensis Wang, 1978 from the Changhsingian, Late Permian of South China ( Wang 1978) by the morphology of the lateroventral ridge but differs by lamellar DB at LV, PB less upturned and AB located lower. Ceratobairdia sexagintaduella sp. nov. is very similar to Bairdia permiana Hamilton, 1942 from the Kungurian of the Glass Mountains ( Hamilton 1942): this species has later been shown to be a junior synonym of Bairdia pecosensis Delo, 1930 by Sohn (1960), who additionally mentioned that the ridge on the ventral part of the RV is not as pronounced as shown in the original drawing of Hamilton (1942).

Chen T. C. 1958. Permian ostracods from the Chihsia Limestone of Lungtan, Nanking. Acta Palaeontologica Sinica 6: 235 - 257.

Chen D. Q. & Bao H. 1986. Lower Permian Ostracodes from the Chihsia Formation of Jurongand Longtar, Jiangsu Province. Acta Micropalaeontologica Sinica 3: 107 - 132.

Cooper C. L. 1946. Pennsylvanian ostracodes of Illinois. Bulletin State Geological Survey of Illinois 70: 1 - 177.

Delo D. M. 1930. Some Upper Carboniferous Ostracoda from the shale basin of western Texas. Journal of Paleontology 4: 152 - 178.

Hamilton B. 1942. Ostracodes from the Upper Permian of Texas. Journal of Paleontology 16 (6): 712 - 718.

Sohn I. G. 1954. Ostracoda from the Permian of the Glass Mountains, Texas. United States Geological Survey Professional Paper 264 - A: 1 - 24. https: // doi. org / 10.3133 / pp 264 a

Sohn I. G. 1960. Paleozoic species of Bairdia and related genera. United States Geological Survey Professional Paper 330 - A: 1 - 105. https: // doi. org / 10.3133 / pp 330 a

Wang S. Q. 1978. Late Permian and Early Triassic ostracods of Western Guizhou and Northeastern Yunnan. Acta Palaeontologica Sinica 17: 277 - 308.

Gallery Image

Fig. 5. Height/length scatter plots of species from the Middle Permian (Roadian, Capitanian) of the Guadalupe Mountains (West Texas, USA). A-1, A-2, A-3. Three last juvenile stages before adult.

Gallery Image

Fig. 9 (next page). SEM micrographs of ostracods from the Middle Permian (Roadian, Quarry section, samples GM1; Capitanian, MKCS1 section, samples 4 (GM5) and 2 (GM6)) of the Guadalupe Mountains (West Texas, USA). All specimens are temporarily housed in the collections of the Muséum national d’histoire naturelle, Paris, France (MNHN). A–C. Ceratobairdia mescaleroella Forel sp. nov. A. Paratype, A-1, external view of a right valve, sample 4 (GM5) (MNHN.F.F63437). B. External view of a left valve, A-2, sample 2 (GM6) (MNHN.F.F63438). C. External view of a right valve, A-2, sample 2 (GM6) (MNHN.F.F63439). – D–J. Ceratobairdia sexagintaduella Forel sp. nov. D. Holotype, right lateral view of a carapace, adult, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63440). E. Paratype, external view of a left valve, adult, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63441). F. External view of a left valve, A-1, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63442). G. Right lateral view of a carapace, A-2, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63443). H. External view of a left valve, A-2, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63444). I. Right lateral view of a carapace, A-3, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63445). J. External view of a left valve, A-3, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63446). – K–R. Ceratobairdia wordensis (Hamilton, 1942). K. External view of a left valve, adult, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63447). L. External view of a left valve, adult, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63448). M. External view of a left valve, A-2?, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63449). N. External view of a right valve, sample 4 (GM5) (MNHN.F.F63450).O. External view of a right valve, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63497). P. External view of a right valve, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63451). Q. External view of a left valve, sample GM1 (MNHN.F.F63452). R. Right lateral view of a carapace, sample 4 (GM5) (MNHN.F.F63453). Scale bars: 100 µm

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Ostracoda

SubClass

Podocopa

Order

Podocopida

SuperFamily

Bairdioidea

Family

Bairdiidae

Genus

Ceratobairdia