Neolepadidae, Yamaguchi, Newman & Hashimoto, 2004
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00705.2019 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B37C6A-1F6F-945E-8FA7-FBF52A52F968 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Neolepadidae |
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Family Neolepadidae Yamaguchi, Newman, and Hashimoto, 2004
Included genera: Neolepas Newman, 1979 , Ashinkailepas Yamaguchi, Newman, and Hashimoto, 2004, Vulcanolepas Southward and Jones, 2003 , Leucolepas Southward and Jones, 2003 , Stipilepas Carriol in Carriol et al., 2016.
Diagnosis. —Pedunculate calcareous forms which possess an 8 plated capitulum comprising two scuta, two terga, two upper latera, a carina and a rostrum. The large rostrum articulates with the rostral margin of the scutum, and the carina with the lower carinal margin of the tergum.
Remarks.—As demonstrated by X-ray diffractometry analysis, Ashinkailepas has shell plates composed of calcite. The Neolepidinae Yamaguchi, Newman, and Hashimoto, 2004, is therefore raised to family status, because the family Eolepadidae Buckeridge, 1983 , to which it was previously assigned, has been shown to have a phosphatic shell ( Høeg et al. 1999; Gale 2014b; Gale and Schweigert 2015), and includes only the genera Eolepas and Toarcolepas . Living forms are exclusively associated with hydrothermal vents and methane seeps ( Watanabe et al. 2018), but the Eocene Stipilepas is found in open marine clay sediments deposited under dysoxic conditions ( Carriol et al. 2016).There have been three records of fossil neolepadids, of which only Stipilepas appears to me to belong to the family. The other records are described below.
? Neolepas augurata Buckeridge and Grant-Mackie, 1985
Fig. 2A, B View Fig .
Material.—UoA A291a, b, A292a, b; two mouldic valves from the Sinemurian–Pliensbachian (Lower Jurassic), New Caledonia.
Remarks.—This species is based upon a single scutum and a fragmentary tergum from the Lower Jurassic of New Caledonia ( Fig. 2A, B View Fig ). The scutum is asymmetrically triangular, with a broad basal margin and an acuminate umbo, and somewhat resembles in outline the scutum of Toarcolepas mutans Gale and Schweigert, 2015 ( Fig. 2C View Fig ). This phosphatic taxon from the Lower Jurassic of Germany is now known from articulated individuals ( Gale et al. 2019: fig. 7A–C). However, the basal margin in? N. augurata is more convex than in T. mutans , and the external surface of the valve appears to be swollen. The tergum of? N. augurata appears similar in shape and sculpture (curved apicobasal line, moderately strong co-marginal ridges, weaker radial ridges) with those of Eolepas bathonica Withers, 1928 (compare Withers 1928: pl. 2: 7–9). The species is tentatively interpreted as a possible eolepadid, but the material requires further study.
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Neolepadidae
Gale, Andy S., Little, Crispin T. S., Johnson, Joel E. & Giosan, Liviu 2020 |
Neolepas augurata
Buckeridge and Grant-Mackie 1985 |