Parvamussium, SACCO, 1897
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.5070/P940561331 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1756B24A-813B-423F-896F-91B21FF58A79 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11505141 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C23987DD-FFD9-291E-FC71-FDB3EB5BBC4D |
treatment provided by |
Felipe (2024-04-03 18:42:11, last updated 2024-11-29 11:05:46) |
scientific name |
Parvamussium |
status |
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PARVAMUSSIUM SACCO, 1897 View in CoL
Type species — By original designation, Pecten duodecimlamellatus Bronn (1832) . Upper Miocene, northern Italy .
Parvamussium View in CoL is treated here as a subgenus of Propeamussium View in CoL , accommodating small, rounded shells, with interior shell slats developing later in ontogeny and coinciding with the inception of distinctive scabrous exterior sculpture on the initially smooth disc of the left valve. Discrepant sculpture on the right and left valves is illustrated here in the living Parvamussium alaskense (Dall, 1871) View in CoL , a typically sedentary form with a well-developed byssal notch in the anterior auricle of the right valve ( Fig. 20E View Figure 20 ). Both auricles are clearly demarcated from the disc, and both are ornamented with radial and commarginal striae. The scabrous pattern of intersecting radial and commarginal striae on the left valve ( Fig. 20F View Figure 20 ) is in marked contrast to the subdued ornamentation of the right valve with commarginal striae only ( Fig. 20E View Figure 20 ). Small size, scabrous sculpture of the left valve, and presence of a byssal notch do not constitute a strong argument for monophyly. However, the lack of a ctenolium in the byssal notch, discrepant valve size and sculpture, and interior slat-like ribs do exclude it from the Pectinidae View in CoL and clearly distinguish it from the two new Keasey Delectopecten species.
Mesozoic species that can be assigned to either Parvamussium View in CoL or Propeamussium View in CoL s.s. first diversified during the Cretaceous, surviving the end Cretaceous extinction to begin a second and continuing radiation in the deep sea (Waller2006). Parvamussium View in CoL achieved cosmopolitan distribution by the Eocene, with records as early as Danian in Patagonia (del Rio et al. 2008). Paleocene and Eocene records in the southern Hemisphere from both Australia (e.g., Darragh 1994, 1997, Stilwell 2003, 2005) and New Zealand (e.g., Beu and Maxwell 1990, Maxwell 1992). Del Rio et al. (2008) provide additional references to Paleogene records from Europe and the Gulf Coast of North America but suggest that the Paleogene taxa inhabited shallow-water facies at this time. In the Northwestern Pacific, however, Parvamussium View in CoL is well documented in Japan from Upper Cretaceous forearc slope mudstones along the subduction zone on Kyushu (e.g., Komatsu et al. 2008) and Hokkaido (e.g., Tsujino and Maeda 2007). These Late Cretaceous forearc sequences also include methane seeps (e.g., Takahashi et al. 2007). The Parvamussium View in CoL bivalve associations are remarkably like those in the Keasey and indicative of an even earlier shift of the minute squamose glass scallops to low energy, oxygen depleted conditions associated with methane seeps.
The major difficulty assessing monophyly and relationships of the squamose glass scallops is the large number of genus group names that have been placed in synomymy under Parvamussium View in CoL . For example, Dijkstra (2013) lists five names based on extant species, including Squamamussium Oyama (1944) View in CoL . Harold Vokes (pers. comm. 1981) intended to assign the new Keasey species to Squammamussium and obtained USNM type numbers for the specimens described and figured here under Parvamussium View in CoL .
Stratigraphic range —Upper Jurassic?–Holocene. Cosmopolitan, bathyal and abyssal depths (modern), shallower in Mesozoic and Early Paleogene.
Beu, A. G., and P. A. Maxwell. 1990. Cenozoic Mollusca of New Zealand. Drawings by R. C. Brazier. New Zealand Geological Survey Paleontological Bulletin 58: 1 - 518.
Bronn, H. G. 1832. Italiens Tertiar-Gebilde und deren organische Einschlusse. K. Groos, Heidelberg. 176 pp.
Dall, W. H. 1898. Contributions to the Tertiary fauna of Florida, with especial reference to the silex-beds of Tampa, and the Pliocene beds of the Caloosahatchie River, including in many cases a complete revision of the generic groups treated and of their American Tertiary species. Transactions of the Wagner Free Institute of Science, Philadelphia 3 (4): 571 - 947, pls. 23 - 35.
Darragh, T. A. 1994. Paleocene bivalves from the Peeble Point Formation, Victoria, Australia. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 106: 71 - 103.
Darragh, T. A. 1997. Gastropoda, Scaphopoda, Cephalopoda, and new Bivalvia of the Paleocnee Peeble Point Formation, Victoria, Australia. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 109: 57 - 108.
Dijkstra, H. H. 2013. Pectinoidea (Bivalvia: Propeamussiidae and Pectinidae) from the Panglao region, Philippine Islands. Vita Malacologia 10: 1 - 108. 32 pls.
del Rio, C. J., A. G. Beu, and S. A. Martinez. 2008. The pectinoidea genera Delectopecten Stewart, 1930 and Parvamussium Sacco, 1897 in the Danian of Northern Patagonia, Argentina. Neues Jahrbuch fur Geologie und Palaontologie 249 (3): 281 - 295.
Figure 20. Variation in shell morphology in living North Pacific Propeamussiidae. A, B. Right and left valves of Propeamussium jeffreysi (E.A. Smith, 1885), SBMNH 126833. C, D. Right and left valves of Cyclopecten davidsoni (Dall, 1898), SBMNH 123955. E, F. Right and left valves of Parvamussium alaskense (Dall, 1871), SBMNH 103661. Scale bars=1 cm.
USNM |
Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History |
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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