Catalanispira Ebbestad, Kotala, and Isakar
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/8479878A-FFDB-7437-FFAA-DA9DC7D8F92E |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Catalanispira Ebbestad, Kotala, and Isakar |
status |
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Genus Catalanispira Ebbestad, Kotala, and Isakar ,
2020a Type species: Catalanispira plattevillensis Ebbestad, Kotala, and Isakar, 2020a , by original designation, from the lower 2 m of the Mifflin Member of the Turinian (Sandbian, Sa2, Upper Ordovician) Platteville Formation ( Diplograptus foliaceous Biozone ) in northern Illinois, eastern USA.
Catalanispira prima sp. nov.
Fig. 5 View Fig .
Zoobank LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:4E4A585F9C0C49BFA2B7467C8303733E
Etymology: From Latin primus, first; from its earliest record of the genus.
Type material: Holotype ( NMW 2017.15 View Materials G.67, Fig. 5B View Fig ), external mould of the dorsal side, and its external mould . Paratypes ( NMW 2017.15 View Materials G.68– 70, Fig. 5A, C, D View Fig ), internal moulds from the type locality .
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.—Species of Catalanispira with 3–3.5 whorls, strong convexity of upper whorl surface and a pleural angle of ~90°.
Description.—Shell large, up to 20 mm across, trochiform with 3–3.5 barely overlapping whorls, where last whorl expands widely. Shell height is about 2/3 of shell width, with the pleural angle being near 90°. Upper whorl surface strongly but evenly convex and sharply rounded at periphery, giving incised sutures. Aperture tangential, elongate elliptical, with a steep umbilical side leading into funnellike umbilicus. Shell thin with simple comarginal growth lines on a slightly irregular surface.
Remarks.—The holotype is an external mould of the dorsal side of the shell from which a silicon cast was made ( Fig. 5B View Fig ), and it demonstrate the large widely expanding shell, number of whorls, and trochiform shape. The convexity of the upper whorl surface is best seen in second largest specimen in Fig. 5A View Fig . None of the specimens preserve the base, but the deep funnellike umbilicus is seen in a lateral view of specimen NMW 2017.15G.70 ( Fig. 5D View Fig ). Although the whorls are somewhat collapsed, most of the convexity is intact. In apertural view it is possible to see the external mould of the umbilical side of the last whorl, showing the narrow lenticular shape of the whorl and steep umbilical wall ( Fig. 5D View Fig 3 View Fig ). The tangential aperture would place the spire at a high angle of inclination, pointing only slightly abaperturally ( Fig. 5C View Fig ). The shell is thin and with simple growth lines ( Fig. 5D View Fig 1 View Fig , D 2 View Fig ). The slightly irregular upper surface is evident in the same specimen, which seems to be the least deformed exemplar. The remaining three specimens show an irregular upper surface with broad comarginal folds of variable prominence. However, this feature is interpreted as largely secondary and enhanced by deformation and compaction.
The new taxon is placed with Catalanispira recently described by Ebbestad et al. (2020a), known from the Sandbian, Late Ordovician C. plattevillensis Ebbestad, Kotala, and Isakar, 2020a , in the USA, and the Darriwilian, late Middle Ordovician C. reinwaldti ( Öpik, 1930) from Estonia, owing to the large low trochiform shell, narrow elliptical aperture, deep funnellike umbilicus and simple ornamentation. It lacks the characteristic broad axeshaped aperture of the Tremadocian–Floian Pelecyogyra Ebbestad and Lefebvre, 2015 , from Morocco and France, which is placed within the same subfamily as Catalanispira ( Ebbestad et al. 2020a, b). Pelecyogyra also has fewer whorls and a much greater expansion of the last whorl.
Besides being much older than the two other species of Catalanispira , the Llangynog taxon seems to have more whorls, a more pronounced trochiform shell and stronger convexity of the upper whorl surface. In terms of size, the Estonian C. reinwaldti is larger than C. prima while C. plattevillensis is smaller. The shell shape of the latter resembles that of the Welsh species, but it has fewer whorls.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Lower Ordovician (Floian) of Wales, Middle Ordovician (Dw3) of Estonia, and the Upper Ordovician (Sa2) of the USA.
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