Holopus plaziati, Roux & Martinez & Vizcaïno, 2021

Roux, Michel, Martinez, Alain & Vizcaïno, Daniel, 2021, A diverse crinoid fauna (Echinodermata, Crinoidea) from the Lower Eocene of the Gulf of Languedoc (Corbières, Aude, southern France), Zootaxa 4963 (2), pp. 201-242 : 233

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4963.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:ACEC045B-AEE7-43FB-A074-D2AD6CB40F1D

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4700750

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038187A7-FFB0-FFF7-36A9-FF3F3969F873

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Holopus plaziati
status

sp. nov.

Holopus plaziati n. sp.

Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17

Type material. The type series consists of 8 brachials, all figured as syntypes ( MNHN.F. A82016 View Materials ) ( Fig. 17 View FIGURE 17 ) .

Etymology. This species is dedicated to Jean-Claude Plaziat, author of many works on the Ilerdian in Corbières, who gave us the benefit of his knowledge of the field, especially concerning the site of Réqui.

Diagnosis. As description of the brachial type series; aboral cup unknown.

Type stratum. Base of blue marls of the middle Ilerdian above Solenomeris limestones, late NP10, but maybe already NP11.

Type locality. Réqui near Montlaur (Val de Dagne, Aude) .

Description of type series. Quantitative characters of brachials of type series given in Table 18. Pentagonal axillary primibrachial (IBr1ax), external surface covered with coarse granulation, straight ( Fig. 17A View FIGURE 17 ) to concave ( Fig. 17F View FIGURE 17 ) lateral borders; internal face with Y-shaped neural groove, junction of two distal muscular synarthries forming conspicuous process ( Fig. 17B, E View FIGURE 17 ), neural groove closing only at level of distal muscular synarthries; distal muscular synarthry with narrow, protruding fulcral ridge, inner edge of fulcral ridge with regular, well-marked crenulation, aboral ligament area slightly concave with narrow fossa of same size as neural canal, adoral ligament area beveled ( Fig. 17J View FIGURE 17 ), muscular area oval towards central lumen and forming series of small fossae running along adoral ligament area opposite the lumen ( Fig. 17D, G, J View FIGURE 17 ); proximal muscular synarthry often poorly preserved with linear fulcral ridge sometimes narrow, bordered by a reduced aboral ligament area and a deep adoral ligament area covered with elongated crenulations ( Fig. 17K View FIGURE 17 ); variable lateral faces often narrow without crenulations ( Fig. 17C View FIGURE 17 ) or wide with field of long crenulations on one of faces ( Fig. 17K–L View FIGURE 17 ). Some smaller, irregularly shaped IBr1ax with occasionally curved proximal face and muscular synarthry offset on one side ( Fig. 17H–I View FIGURE 17 ). Proximal subrectangular secundibrachials subrectangular, wider than high, 3 to 5 strong lateral crenulations on each side ( Fig. 17M, O View FIGURE 17 ), muscular synathry symmetrical with respect to axial plane ( Fig. 17M View FIGURE 17 ), no synarthry observed on opposite facet, possibly a synostosis, but feature probably related to poor preservation ( Fig. 17N–O View FIGURE 17 ).

Remarks. The extant species, H. rangii , often shows a crown with a trivium of three large pentagonal IBr and well-developed arms and a bivium of two smaller IBr, sometimes irregularly shaped and with shorter arms ( Carpenter 1884). The bivium is on the inside of the crown curvature and the trivium on the outside. This more or less marked arrangement is independent of the position of the anus ( Grimmer & Holland 1990). It is thought to develop during growth under the influence of a unidirectional current ( Donovan 1992). In H. plaziati n. sp., large pentagonal IBrax with few or no lateral crenulations ( Fig. 17A–F View FIGURE 17 ) and those smaller, with widely developed lateral crenulations ( Fig. 17K–L View FIGURE 17 ) or irregularly shaped ( Fig. 17H–I View FIGURE 17 ), suggest the presence of a trivium and a bivium, respectively ( Table 18). All other fossil species of Holopus are known only by their aboral cup. The oldest specimen has been recorded from Late Campanian chalk in northern Germany ( Jagt et al. 2010). Manni (2005) and Frisone et al. (2020) confirmed the presence of the genus in the Eocene of northeast Italy. The Réqui site provided the first examples of brachials of an extinct species of Holopus . The corresponding aboral cup remains to be discovered.

Occurrence. Early Ypresian in Corbières (middle Ilerdian), species only known from Réqui near Montlaur (Val de Dagne, Aude).

MNHN

Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle

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