Rhagasostoma operculatum, Koromyslova & Taylor & Martha & Riley, 2018
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2018.490 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BE023137-CC5E-4DC5-94F6-B549BB140361 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3849962 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/23F08F8D-29DB-4470-B8FA-B176256858F8 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:23F08F8D-29DB-4470-B8FA-B176256858F8 |
treatment provided by |
Valdenar |
scientific name |
Rhagasostoma operculatum |
status |
sp. nov. |
Rhagasostoma operculatum View in CoL sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:23F08F8D-29DB-4470-B8FA-B176256858F8
Fig. 11 View Fig , Table 6
Onychocella inelegans ( Lonsdale, 1850) View in CoL – Favorskaya 1992: 125, pl. 64, fig. 7. — Favorskaya 1996: pl. 3, fig. 4. — Koromyslova 2014b: pl. 3, fig. 1.
non Onychocella inelegans View in CoL – Favorskaya 1992: 125, pl. 64, fig. 6, pl. 65, fig. 1.
Diagnosis
Colony erect, bifoliate. Autozooids subrectangular, zooidal boundaries raised; gymnocyst lacking; cryptocyst extensive; opesia terminal, semielliptical; putative calcified opercula rounded trapezoidal. Avicularia interzooidal; rostrum channeled with rounded tip, between conical in outline and spade- shaped, asymmetrical; proximal part rounded, shorter and wider than rostrum; opesia egg-shaped with thin articular ridges bearing two short teeth proximally and a short opesiular indentation between the teeth; opesiules lacking.
Etymology
The species is named from the Latin ‘ operculum ’ because the opesiae of autozooids are presumably closed by calcified opercula.
Material studied
Holotype
TURKMENISTAN • Western Kopetdag, Kara-Kala ; boundary layers of the early Campanian ( Cibicidoides temirensis / Bolivinoides decoratus decoratus Zone ; LS 13) to middle Campanian ( Brotzenella monterelensis Zone ; LS 14) of the western Kopetdag ; TsNIGR Museum 27/12582 ( Fig. 11 View Fig A–C; figured by Favorskaya 1992: pl. 64, fig. 7).
Type locality and horizon
Turkmenistan, Western Kopetdag; boundary layers of the early to middle Campanian.
Description
Colony erect, flattened, bifoliate; fragments 6.0 mm long by 2 mm wide. Ancestrula and early astogeny not observed. Autozooids variable in shape, often broad and subrectangular with rounded distal ends; zooidal boundaries raised. Gymnocyst lacking. Cryptocyst extensive, finely pustulose, slightly depressed centrally, without peripheral caverns. Opesia terminal, semielliptical, presumably closed by calcified opercula. Putative opercula rounded trapezoidal and slightly concave, tubercular externally ( Fig. 11C View Fig ), proximal edge slightly arched and with ‘ears’ at the ends, which are 0.03–0.05 mm wide, ‘ears’ projecting 0.01–0.02 mm below the proximal edge. Septula not observed. Ovicells not observed. Avicularia interzooidal, longer than autozooids, elongate. Rostrum channeled with elevated walls and often rounded top, between conical in outline and spade-shaped, asymmetrical, dextral or sinistral. Proximal part rounded, shorter and wider than rostrum, cryptocyst pustulose, concave. Opesia eggshaped with the narrow end pointing upwards and with thin articular ridges bearing two short teeth proximally and short opesiular indentation between the teeth; opesiules lacking. Kenozooids, closure plates, intramural reparative budding autozooids, kenozooids, and avicularia not observed.
Remarks
Rhagasostoma operculatum sp. nov. differs from R. brydonei sp. nov., another species with a spadeshaped avicularian rostrum, in the rostrum having almost the same width along the whole of their length and having a pointed or rounded rostral tip instead of the rostrum being narrowed at the base, enlarged centrally and with a pointed tip. The new species differs from the other species described herein in having a spade-shaped avicularian rostrum instead of one that is conical in outline or falciform. Moreover, opesiae of autozooids of R. operculatum sp. nov. are presumably closed by calcified opercula.
Rhagasostoma operculatum sp. nov. is the earliest known species in cryptocystidean anascan cheilostomes that has putative calcified opercula. Late Cretaceous cheilostomes with calcified opercula from the family Onychocellidae include Inversaria flabellula (von Hagenow, 1846) from the late Campanian of Scania, Sweden,? Inversaria sp. from the late Campanian to Maastrichtian of United Arab Emirates, and Inversaria tubiporacea (Goldfuss, 1826) and Onychocella exilis Koromyslova & Shcherbinina, 2015 from the Maastrichtian of NW Europe and Uzbekistan, respectively ( Voigt & Williams 1973; Voigt 1974; Di Martino & Taylor 2013; Koromyslova 2014b; Koromyslova & Shcherbinina 2015). Calcified opercula have also been observed in several species belonging to the family Cribrilinidae Hincks, 1879 including Castanopora lambi Turner, 1975 from the Maastrichtian of USA ( Turner 1975; McKinney et al. 2003; Taylor & McKinney 2006).
Distribution
Early to middle Campanian Turkmenistan: western Kopetdag, Kara-Kala.
LS |
United Kingdom, London, Linnean Society |
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.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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SuperFamily |
Microporoidea |
Family |
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Genus |
Rhagasostoma operculatum
Koromyslova, Anna V., Taylor, Paul D., Martha, Silviu O. & Riley, Matthew 2018 |
Onychocella inelegans ( Lonsdale, 1850 )
Favorskaya T. A. 1992: 125 |
Onychocella inelegans
Favorskaya T. A. 1992: 125 |