Chrispaulia spinosa, Gale & Jagt, 2021

Gale, Andy S. & Jagt, John W. M., 2021, The fossil record of the family Benthopectinidae (Echinodermata, Asteroidea), a reappraisal, European Journal of Taxonomy 755, pp. 149-190 : 176

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.755.1405

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F9105E33-3E8B-4B3C-88B3-0316207B70F6

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5033000

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4C003A9F-1F91-44BC-91AB-2910B8EA756A

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:4C003A9F-1F91-44BC-91AB-2910B8EA756A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Chrispaulia spinosa
status

sp. nov.

Chrispaulia spinosa sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:4C003A9F-1F91-44BC-91AB-2910B8EA756A

Fig. 13D–E, H–O View Fig

Diagnosis

Chrispaulia in which distal inferomarginals bear an oblique row of large, bifid spine attachment sites, which carried long, flattened spines.

Etymology

Latin for ‘bearing spines’, in reference to the row of spine attachment sites on distal inferomarginals.

Material examined

A distal arm fragment ( Nds LH 105.107 ), comprising five marginal pairs, with articulating spines preserved, is the holotype; it is from the lower Hauterivian ( Endemoceras amblygonium ammonite Zone) at Engelbostel near Hannover (northern Germany). Paratypes ( NHMUK PI EE 17998–18004 ) are 35 marginal ossicles and a single oral ossicle from the upper 3 metres of the Tealby Clay (Hauterivian) at Nettleton, Lincolnshire (United Kingdom).

Description

Arms elongated, narrow, tapering slowly ( Fig. 13D–E View Fig ); proximal superomarginals tall, block-like, bearing a single, abactinally directed, crater-like spine base. Central region of external face narrow, poorly defined, lateral surfaces broad with small rugosities for attachment of tiny cribriform spines ( Fig. 13H–I, N View Fig ; spines still articulated in Fig. 13D View Fig ). Distal superomarginals with or without an abactinally situated, distally directed large spine base ( Fig. 13I–J View Fig ), rugose ( Fig. 13D View Fig ) or smooth ( Fig. 13I–J View Fig ). Distal infero- and superomarginals thin, imbricating proximally; distal inferomarginals with oblique row of large, bifid spine bases, which bore flattened, lanceolate spines ( Fig. 13D View Fig ). Sharply defined grooves for cribriform organs between each infero-/superomarginal pair. Oral ossicle ( Fig. 13O View Fig ) with broad actinal face, bearing large rugosities for attachment of sos; large elongate oradm, low, broad apophyse.

Remarks

Chrispaulia spinosa sp. nov. differs from its congeners in its possession of 3–4 bifid spine pits on distal inferomarginals.

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