Dehmicystis ariasi, Zamora & Gutiérrez-Marco, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.01054.2023 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10987230 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038887FF-FFD5-FF96-FFD8-CFACFC439D7F |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Dehmicystis ariasi |
status |
sp. nov. |
Dehmicystis ariasi sp. nov.
Figs. 3 View Fig , 4 View Fig .
Zoobank LCID: urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:88604815-85BD-4E73-8FA4-2381B337484C
Etymology: Dedicated to Francisco Arias Ferrero (Ponferrada, Spain) for collecting the only specimen known and making it available for study.
Holotype: MGM-208S-a (part) and MGM-208S-b (counterpart). Type locality: 340 m west of Poleares high (946 m), about 960 m northeast of O Castelo village in the Rubiá municipality, Ourense Province, Galicia, NW Spain. GPS coordinates: 42º27′22.5″ N, 6º51′57.1″ W GoogleMaps .
Type horizon: Shale bed with a slight chloritoid content in the upper part of the Llagarinos Formation. Bed of a probably Gorstian (early Ludlow) age by lateral correlation with a nearby locality.
Material.— Holotype only.
Diagnosis. —A species of Dehmicystis with a globular theca, proxistele equal in length to the theca. Undifferentiated mesistele.
Description.—Thecal shape rounded, large (45 mm in length, 30 mm in width), nearly bilaterally symmetric with the left side more developed than the right. Theca widening posteriorly with an invagination for the insertion of the homoiostele. Narrow peripheral ring as a result of compression rather than originally biological. Plates very thin, superimposed integuments (taphonomic), polygonal and relatively large. Boundaries between plates are poorly preserved. Feeding appendage off the apex, on an integument with attachment to the theca on left side; relatively large with wider rectangular basal plates (flooring plates) and thinner, cover plates. Feeding appendage thinning distally, with food groove oriented to the substrate (see interpretation below). Small gonopore on a circular tiny plate, associated with some rugose plates interpreted as hydropore. Both separated one another. Periproct large, on the opposite side of the theca, close to the appendage insertion but on the right position. Proxistele very large, consisting of eleven tetramerous rings, two on each side. Posterior side of each ring with a depressed side for the articulation of adjacent rows distally. Distal stele only preserved proximally, composed of two dimeres. Theca slightly longer than the proxistele.
Remarks.—Comparison with the type species Dehmicystis globulus ( Dehm, 1934) from Germany ( Fig. 2 View Fig ), poses several problems; specially because German specimens are flattened and tectonically distorted, and also because none of the known specimens is totally complete ( Fig. 2 View Fig ). Holotype and individual 1 from Rahman and Linz (2012) have the anterior part of the theca incomplete, individual 2 preserves only the homoiostele and individual 3 preserves only the homoiostele and posterior part of the theca. Rahman and Linz (2012) indicated that the dimensions of the holotype are 70 × 67 mm, but based on new observations, this is unlikely (see Table 1 View Table 1 ). The length of the holotype is unknown because incomplete preservation of the anterior part and its width is about 40 mm. So dimensions of the holotype are comparable to D. ariasi . The other individuals seem relatively larger. Shape of the theca between both species seems different, being more elongate in the German taxon, but this difference can be also due to the strong tectonic distortion affecting the Hunsrück material. Another important difference is the relation between thecal and proxistele lengths. Spanish material seems to have a longer proxistele which is almost equal than the length of the theca. For contrast D. globulus has a shorter proxistele. Mesistele is well preserved in the individual 2 of Rahman and Linz (2012), but it is absent in the Spanish material, where transition from the proxistele to the dististele is more abrupt. Further comparison with the type species is not possible due to incomplete preservation of material from both Spain and Germany, and different preservation styles being German specimens more compressed.
Stratigraphic and geographic range.— Type horizon and locality only.
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.
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