Microeciella magnopora, Zatoń & Taylor, 2009
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2008.0088 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/8D1787D5-4B06-7859-FFED-68049C0EF9E7 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Microeciella magnopora |
status |
sp. nov. |
Microeciella magnopora View in CoL sp. nov.
Fig. 7 View Fig .
Etymology: In reference to the unusually large size of the ooeciopore.
Type material: Holotype:GIUS 8−3509−15; paratype: GIUS 8−3509−2.
Type locality: Bugaj , Polish Jura, Poland .
Type horizon: Middle Bathonian ( Tulites subcontractus or Morrisiceras morrisi Zone ), Jurassic.
Material.— Holotype and paratype listed above.
Measurements.—FWL, 850–1150 µm; FWW, 250–275 µm; LAM, 100–125 µm; TAM, 100–125 µm; LPM, 125–200 µm; TPM, 150–175 µm; GTL, 1250–1625 µm; GDL, 550–725 µm; GW, 512–625 µm; OL, 150 µm; OW, 162 µm; PL, 15–16.5 µm; PW, 1.6–3.3 µm.
Diagnosis.— Microeciella with gonozooids having equidimensional, ovoidal or heart−shaped brood chambers with a large ooeciopore about the same size as an autozooidal aperture; autozooids large, frontal walls more than 250 µm wide; pseudopores narrow, slit−like.
Description.—Colony encrusting, sheet−like, multiserial, bereniciform. Early astogenetic stages preserved but ancestrula not visible.
Autozooids large, elongate, widening distally towards apertures, with rather flat frontal wall but with distinct boundaries. Peristomes short, upright, tapering distally. Apertures circular to subcircular, some closed by terminal diaphragms. Pseudopores closely−spaced, narrow, slit−like, longitudinally elongate ( Fig. 7A View Fig 4).
Gonozooids uncommon. Proximal frontal wall indistinguishable from that of an autozooid. Brood chamber ovoidal or heart−shaped, V−shaped at its proximal end, slightly longer than wide, bulbous, roof densely pseudoporous ( Fig. 7A View Fig 3 View Fig ). Ooeciopore, preserved in only one gonozooid, subterminal, circular in outline, large, similar in size to an autozooidal aperture ( Fig. 7A View Fig 3 View Fig ).
Remarks.—Although the gonozooids in the paratype specimen are roofless, without the distinctive large ooeciopore being visible, the general shape of the brood chambers is similar to the holotype, as are the autozooids and pseudopores. Therefore, we place the two specimens in the same new species, M. magnopora .
No other species of Microeciella have such a large ooeciopore as that of M. magnopora , in which it is approximately the same size as the autozooidal apertures. Neglecting ooeciopore size, the closest resemblance among the Polish species of Microeciella described in this study is with M. kuklinskii which has autozooids of about the same size and a similarly−shaped brood chamber. However, the pseudopores of the two species are quite different, those of M. kuklinskii being broad and teardrop shaped, contrasting with the narrow, slit−like pseudopores of M. magnopora .
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Middle Bathonian of Bugaj, Polish Jura.
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