Mimospira llangynogensis, Ebbestad & Cope, 2021
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00854.2020 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:01FF623C-11BB-4A03-8DE7-354990FBF7ED |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/E9919E4F-34D0-4B67-870E-C466C435A7B6 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:E9919E4F-34D0-4B67-870E-C466C435A7B6 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Mimospira llangynogensis |
status |
sp. nov. |
Mimospira llangynogensis sp. nov.
Fig. 4 View Fig .
Zoobank LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:E9919E4F34D04B67870EC466C435A7B6
Etymology:After the Llangynog Inlier, where the type specimen is found.
Type material: Holotype ( NMW 2017.15 View Materials G.58, Fig. 4A View Fig ), laterally flattened internal mould and its external mould . Paratypes ( NMW 2017.15 View Materials G.59–66, Fig. 4C View Fig ), internal and external moulds; from the type locality.Two of the paratype specimens occur on NMW 2017.15 View Materials G.60i, ii .
Type locality: DanlanyCastell quarry, Carmarthen , Wales, UK .
Type horizon: Merlinia selwynii Trilobite Zone, Moridunian regional Stage (lower Floian Stage, Fl 1) .
Material.— Type material only.
Diagnosis.—A large species of Mimospira with a small number of sharp ribs inclined at about 20° relative to the suture.
Description.—Shell is conispiral with 5–6 whorls, width slightly less than height, which can reach at least 12 mm. Pleural angle is about 55°. Sutures sharply incised but not deep (external view). Whorl surface steeply inclined and evenly convex between sutures. Aperture gently prosocline, simple and thin near suture, but likely getting thicker adumbilically. Ornamentation consist of regularly spaced ribs with rounded edges, separated by weakly concave interareas. The ribs are regularly spaced, with slightly increased spacing in later ontogeny. Each whorl show 5–6 ribs in lateral view, inclined at about 20° relative to the suture. Base of whorls rounded, convex, sloping gently into shallow axial area.
Remarks.—All specimens are laterally compressed internal or external moulds, but the large size and ornamentation allows erection of a new species. The holotype is flattened laterally, but is selected as it shows the apertural margin, which seems to be simple without any thickening ( Fig. 4A View Fig ). The inner lip of the aperture is not preserved, but one internal mould show an excavated ledge along the base (arrow in Fig. 4E View Fig ) suggesting the presence of a thickened margin towards the umbilical area. Fig. 4C View Fig 2 View Fig shows the only preserved basal view, which is an internal mould of the partial counterpart of the lower specimen in Fig. 4C View Fig 1 View Fig . The rounded base gives a shallow area towards the axis, but no true umbilicus. The hole seen in the base indicates the space resulting from a dissolved columella.
Only Mimospira sp. from the Tremadocian (Lower Ordovician) Vogtendorf Formation of the Franconian Forest in Germany, tentatively assigned to the genus by Sdzuy et al. (2001), attain a similar size. The single imperfect German specimen differs from M. llangynogensis sp. nov. in having more densely spaced ribs that also become much denser near the base of the whorls. Other Tremadocian species are found in the Prague Basin, with M. cf. helmhackeri in the Trenice Formation and M. aff. helmhackeri and M. sp. in the overlying Mílina Formation, although only the quite fragmentary Trenice specimen has been figured ( Kraft et al. 2013, 2015). Another Tremadocian species is Mimospira atava ( Moberg and Segerberg, 1906) from the Bjørkåsholmen Formation of southern Sweden, which is a small species with densely ribbed ornamentation (see further discussion in WängbergEriksson 1979; Sdzuy et al. 2001).
The ornamentation in the Late Ordovician species M. kallholnensis WängbergEriksson, 1979 , from the Boda Limestone of Sweden is similar in their distinction and spacing compared to that of M. llangynogensis sp. nov., and the shell reaches a height of 7 mm. The two differ in the ribs being more cordlike in M. kallholnensis and its shell being proportionally narrow and slender. The type species of Mimospira , M. helmhackeri from the Darriwilian of Bohemia, reaches 8 mm in height, and the ornamentation is similar to that of M. kallholnensis , albeit more densely spaced. The base of the last whorl in the type species forms a flangelike extension not seen in other species of the genus.
Bates (1963) described Matherella? acuticostata from the Fennian (Dapingian; Middle Ordovician) Treiorwerth Formation at Trefor in the county of Anglesey, northwest Wales.The species was placed with Mimospira by WängbergEriksson (1979), and consists of a tall shell reaching 8 mm in height but with much more densely spaced oblique lirae than seen in M. llangynogensis sp. nov.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Ordovician; Illinois USA), Tallinn ( Estonia), Carmarthen, Wales ( UK).
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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Genus |
Mimospira llangynogensis
Ebbestad, Jan Ove R. & Cope, John C. W. 2021 |
M. llangynogensis
Ebbestad & Cope 2021 |
M. llangynogensis
Ebbestad & Cope 2021 |
M. kallholnensis WängbergEriksson, 1979
Wangberg-Eriksson 1979 |
M. kallholnensis
Wangberg-Eriksson 1979 |
M. kallholnensis
Wangberg-Eriksson 1979 |
Mimospira
Koken 1925 |
M. cf. helmhackeri
Perner 1900 |
M. aff. helmhackeri
Perner 1900 |
M. helmhackeri
Perner 1900 |