Serratocrista scaldisensis, Mottequin & Simon, 2017

Mottequin, Bernard & Simon, Eric, 2017, New insights on Tournaisian-Visean (Carboniferous, Mississippian) athyridide, orthotetide, rhynchonellide, and strophomenide brachiopods from southern Belgium, Palaeontologia Electronica 37 (3), pp. 1-45 : 21-24

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26879/758

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8541AA1E-F9DE-4079-AE09-918FFF61ADC1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/29F8E248-E952-42A5-9307-2A3931FC86CE

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:29F8E248-E952-42A5-9307-2A3931FC86CE

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Serratocrista scaldisensis
status

sp. nov.

Serratocrista scaldisensis sp. nov.

Figures 4 View FIGURE 4 , 17-19 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 , Table 2

zoobank.org/ 29F8E248-E952-42A5-9307-2A3931FC86CE

Etymology. From Scaldis (Latin: Escaut), in reference to the Escaut river on the banks of which the town of Tournai is settled.

Holotype. RBINS a13110 ( Figures 17.12-16 View FIGURE 17 , 18.1, 18.6 View FIGURE 18 ).

Paratypes. RBINS: a13108 ( Figure 17.1-6 View FIGURE 17 ), a13109 ( Figure 17.7 View FIGURE 17 -11), a13111 ( Figures 17.17- 21, 18.2-3, 18.19-21 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21 ), a13112 ( Figure 17.22-25 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21 View FIGURE 22 View FIGURE 23. 1-7 View FIGURE 24 View FIGURE 25 ), a13113 ( Figure 18.4-5 View FIGURE 18 ), a13114 ( Figure 18.7-13 View FIGURE 18 ), a13115 ( Figure 18.14-18 View FIGURE 18 ), and a13116 ( Figure 19 View FIGURE 19 ) . Additional material. RBINS: four articulated specimens.

Type locality. Tournai area (southwestern Belgium) ( Figures 2-3 View FIGURE 2 View FIGURE 3 ).

Type stratum. Tournai Formation, Tournaisian ( Figure 4 View FIGURE 4 ).

Diagnosis. A small-sized (ca. 15 mm in width) Serratocrista species of, wider than long, planoconvex in profile and subquadrate-rounded in outline, with maximum width near midlength. Ornamentation multicostellate, 12 to15 costellae per 5 mm at anterior margin with costellae increasing essentially by intercalations. Dorsal muscle field impressed, obscure, poorly delimited anteriorly, extending up to 40 percent of the valve length; myophragm low.

Description. Shell small-sized (up to 15.6 mm in width), wider than long, subquadrate in outline, plano-convex; maximum width near midlength; hinge line shorter than maximal width; cardinal angles and anterior margin rounded; anterior commissure rectimarginate to slightly unisulcate. Shell extropunctate with extropunctae arranged radially along the axis of the costellae ( Figure 18.2-3 View FIGURE 18 ).

Ventral valve convex, with maximum height near posterior margin, then decreasing progressively towards anterior commissure; umbo small but prominent, umbonal region sometimes deformed (flattened) by cementation with koskinoid perforations ( Figure 18.19-21 View FIGURE 18 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20 View FIGURE 21 ), which are also present on the interarea); beak not curved; interarea triangular, low, cata-apsacline to apsacline, flat to slightly concave; pseudodeltidium strongly convex ( Figure 18.1-3 View FIGURE 18 ).

Dorsal valve flat with, in some specimens, development of a shallow median depression; chilidium small, convex, medianly grooved; interarea linear, anacline, flat.

Ornamentation multicostellate (12–15 costellae per 5 mm at anterior margin) with costellae increasing essentially by intercalations, more rarely by bifurcations; ca. 10 concentric microlines per 1 mm, thickened at irregular interval (growth varices), and forming protuberances on rib crests ( Figure 18.6 View FIGURE 18 ).

Ventral interior poorly known ( Figures 17.6 View FIGURE 17 , 19.1-4 View FIGURE 19 ); teeth small, rounded, unsupported; muscle field not observed.

Dorsal interior ( Figure 18.1-3 View FIGURE 18 , 8 View FIGURE 8 , 12-13 View FIGURE 12 View FIGURE 13 , 15-18 View FIGURE 15 View FIGURE 16 View FIGURE 17 View FIGURE 18 ) with cardinal process lobes small, posteriorly grooved; muscle field impressed, obscure, poorly delimited anteriorly, extending up to 40 percent of the valve length; myophragm low (observed in one specimen); socket ridges diverging from the hinge line at an angle of 26–48 degrees (n=2).

Dimensions ( Table 2)

Remarks. The ornamentation and the cardinalia of this limited material suggest an assignment to Serratocrista , although its type species is devoid of dorsal myophragm, which has been observed in ours. In their discussion of the original diagnosis given by Brunton (1968), Roberts (1971) and McIntosh (1974) reported the occasional occurrence of a dorsal myophragm in their material assigned to Brunton’s genus from Australia and Scotland, respectively. Besides the presence of a dorsal myophragm, the Belgian material is distinguished from Serratocrista fistulosa in its more flattened dorsal valve. Our specimens are markedly smaller than the Serpukhovian species Serratocrista dalriensis and S. cylindricosta , both described by McIntosh (1974). The Belgian species differs from S. truyolsi Martínez Chacón, 1979 from the Moscovian of Spain (see also Martínez Chacón, 2008) in its planoconvex shell and the not so deep dorsal median depression. The species from Tournai is relatively close to the Tournaisian ( China) and Visean ( Australia) Serratocrista sp. described by Sun and Baliński (2008) and Roberts (1971), respectively, but differs in its more divergent socket ridges.

Occurrence. Serratocrista scaldisensis is currently only known from the Tournai Formation in the Tournai area.

RBINS

Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences

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