Elliptiolucina fernandoi, Kiel & Aguilar & Kase, 2020
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00756.2020 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3B7C70AD-CC73-44D5-921E-B1BA0503FC29 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6A60B3D8-F57F-498C-9E7D-895ADB4496FC |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:6A60B3D8-F57F-498C-9E7D-895ADB4496FC |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Elliptiolucina fernandoi |
status |
sp. nov. |
Elliptiolucina fernandoi View in CoL sp. nov.
Fig. 10 View Fig .
Zoobank LSID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:6A60B3D8-F57F-498C-9E7D-895ADB4496FC
Etymology: In honour of Allan Gil S. Fernando (Quezon City, Philippines), for his invaluable help in dating the Bata Formation.
Type material: Holotype NMP-2163, an articulated specimen with the hinge of the right valve exposed. Paratype NMNS PM 28119 , a slightly damaged specimen with the anterior adductor muscle scars exposed from the type locality .
Type locality: Liog-Liog Point , Leyte, Philippines .
Type horizon: Upper Pliocene part of the Bata Formation .
Material.— Three specimens from the Pliocene of Liog-Liog Point : type material and NMNS PM 28149 . One specimen from the Pleistocene of Cambantug Point , NMNS PM 28122 and two from the Pleistocene of Buhoc Point , NMNS PM 28123 , 28124 View Materials .
Dimensions (in mm).—NMP-2163, L = 68.0, H = 55.1; NMNS PM 28119, L = 67.5, H = 55.1.
Diagnosis.—Average size for genus, outline oval but not very elongate, moderately inflated; hinge plate broad for genus, with distinct short, thick remnant of a cardinal tooth in left valve; no lateral teeth.
Description.—Shell oval in outline, umbones small, pointed, very little elevated above hinge plate, situated just anterior to vertical midline of shell; anterior margin broadly rounded or slightly oblique below vertical midline; posterior margin broadly rounded; anterodorsal margin straight to slightly convex, posterodorsal margin evenly convex or with slight median angulation; ventral margin evenly convex. Inflation moderate, evenly convex; lunule and escutcheon long, narrow, bordered by sharp ridges. Shell surface covered by fine, commarginal growth increments, most distinct in anterodorsal area; very slight, broad radial depressions marking antero- and posterodorsal areas. Hinge plate strong, right valve with triangular cavity underneath umbo, right valve with short, broad, vertical remnant of cardinal tooth; no lateral teeth. Anterior adductor muscle scar diverging from pallial line by ~40°, anterior pedal retractor scar round, distinct from adductor muscle scar.
Remarks.—The three extant species described by Cosel and Bouchet (2008) from deep waters of the Philippines and Indonesia ( Elliptiolucina magnifica , E. labeyriei , and E. virginiae ) differ from E. fernandoi by being more elongate and, except for E. labeyriei , by having a narrower hinge plate. E. williamsae Glover and Taylor, 2016 from 280–679 m depth in the central Philippines is smaller than E. fernandoi (44.1 mm vs. 68.0 mm maximum length) and it possesses a prominent anterior lateral tooth in the right valve that is missing in E. fernandoi . The extant E. ingens Okutani, 2011 from 576–594 m depth on the slope of the East China Sea ( Okutani 2011), growth to bigger size (up to 90.7 mm) and is more inflated than E. fernandoi .
Three fossil species of Elliptiolucina are described to date. The late Oligocene E. washingtonia Kiel, 2013 from western Washington state, USA, is more elongate and has a straighter posterodorsal margin than E. fernandoi . The middle Miocene E. neozelandica Amano, Little, and Campbell, 2018 from the Moonlight North seep deposit in New Zealand ( Amano et al. 2018) is much smaller and has more elevated umbones than E. cambantugensis . The late Miocene Elliptiolucina hetzeli ( Martin, 1933) from asphalt deposit on Buton Island, Indonesia ( Martin 1933; Kiel 2013) is more elongate and has more narrowly rounded anterior and posterior margins compared to E. fernandoi .
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Late Pliocene to early Pleistocene: Leyte, Philippines.
NMNS |
National Museum of Natural Science |
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