Fordilla, Jell, 1980

Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Clausen, Sébastien & Vendrasco, Michael J., 2015, An early Cambrian fauna of skeletal fossils from the Emyaksin Formation, northern Siberia, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 60 (2), pp. 421-512 : 440-441

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2012.0004

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C3891D-153F-C266-FFF5-F8FFCC45F866

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Fordilla
status

 

Fordilla View in CoL cf. F. sibirica Krasilova, 1977

Fig. 21 View Fig .

Material.—One calcium phosphatic internal mould, SMNH Mo 167690 ( Fig. 21A View Fig ) and, probably, SMNH Mo 167692 ( Fig. 21C View Fig , larger fragment), from sample 7/70. Uppermost Emyaksin Formation, Bol’shaya Kuonamka River; Calodiscus -Erbiella Zone, lower Botoman Stage.

Description.—Shell ca. 2.5 mm in length ( Fig. 21A View Fig ), equivalved, with valves suboval in lateral outline and anteriorly located umbones ( Fig. 21A View Fig 1 View Fig ). Dentition is represented by casts of a single weakly impressed tooth and corresponding socket on each valve ( Fig. 21A View Fig 2 View Fig , A 3 View Fig ). Ligament area elongat- ed, straight, opisthodetic, occupying more than half of the dorsal margin. In lateral view, the angle between dorsal and posterior margins is ~135° ( Fig. 21A View Fig 1 View Fig ). The ration of anterior length (horizontal distance between anterior margin and the center of the umbo) to total length is ca. 36% (see Elicki and Gürsu 2009).

Remarks. — The fossil in Fig. 21A View Fig is most similar to F. sibirica in general morphology, but the definitive assignment is hampered by the lack of muscular imprints preserved. Krasilova (1977) described F. sibirica based on twenty internal moulds from the Atdabanian of Siberia. Runnegar and Pojeta (1992) listed F. sibirica as a junior synonym of F. troyensis , but Elicki and Gürsu (2009) argued that these species can be differentiated by features such as a straight dorsal margin, smaller size, less concavity, and a different pattern of shell microstructure. We concur with Elicki and Gürsu. The fossil here differs from F. troyensis in having a straighter dorsal margin and lacking a dorsoventral expansion in the posterior region of the valves. F. germanica Elicki, 1994 has a more elongated shape.

Imprints of shell microstructure are visible at the posterior margin ( Fig. 21A View Fig 4 View Fig ). As with Pojetaia the inner shell microstructure near the margin of Fordilla consists of laminae whose growth direction parallels the closest region of the valve margin ( Fig. 21A View Fig 4 View Fig ). Elsewhere the shell microstructure is less well organised ( Runnegar and Pojeta 1992; Vendrasco et al. 2011a). This pattern has been described in Pojetaia runnegari , Fordilla troyensis , and now Fordilla cf. F. sibirica . The occurrence of this pattern of microstructure in Fordilla cf. F. sibirica supports the arguments that it is a diagnostic character of the Family Fordillidae and that this was the primitive type of shell microstructure in bivalves, which may have been a precursor to nacre ( Vendrasco et al. 2011a).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Bivalvia

Order

Fordillida

Family

Fordillidae

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