Regioscalpellum, Gale, 2016
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1111/zoj.12321 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7314175 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D63555-CC31-0D79-52DA-FBD8BB776301 |
treatment provided by |
Marcus |
scientific name |
Regioscalpellum |
status |
gen. nov. |
GENUS REGIOSCALPELLUM GEN. NOV.
FIGURES 2B View Figure 2 , 6P–T View Figure 6 , 10J, K, 11M–P, 18N–S
Diagnosis
Scalpellines in which a concave, internal upper latus surface and short carinal margin is present on the carinolatus, covered by epidermis; umbones of carinolatus incurved, lateral margin of carinolatus strongly convex.
Type species
Scalpellum regium Thomson, 1873 .
Derivation of name
In eponymous reference to the type species.
Referred species
Scalpellum darwini Hoek, 1883 , Scalpellum gigas Hoek, 1883 , Scalpellum moluccanum Hoek, 1883 , Pollicipes maximus J. de C Sowerby, 1829 , and Arcoscalpellum sanchezae Withers, 1953 .
Remarks
The distinctive R. maximum (Fig. 18N, O, P, S) is common in Cretaceous chalks and marginal marine deposits from the Coniacian to the Maastrichtian ( Withers, 1935), and Regioscalpellum gen. nov. is represented in the Eocene of Cuba by Arcoscalpellum sanchezae Withers, 1953 .
GENUS GRAVISCALPELLUM FOSTER, 1980 View in CoL
FIGURES 2E–H View Figure 2 , 13A–C View Figure 13
Type species
Scalpellum pedunculatum Hoek, 1883 , by original designation.
Diagnosis
Scalpellinae in which the rostrolatera and inferomedian latera are very low in proportion to the height of the capitulum; carinolatera have an elongated rhomboidal outline, with a prominent ridge on the long axis; the umbonal region of the carinolatus is weakly involuted.
Included species
Scalpellum regina Pilsbry, 1907 ; Arcoscalpellum ungulatum Withers, 1953 ; Graviscalpellum grantmackiei Buckeridge, 1983 .
Remarks
Foster (1980: 526) established Graviscalpellum to include ‘Arcoscalpellids that are hermaphroditic, attain relatively large size and have lower latera about one tenth the height of the capitulum’. Subsequently, the genus was treated as a junior synonym of Anguloscalpellum Zevina, 1978b , because Zevina (1981) had included S. pedunculatum in that genus (e.g. Young, 2007); however, the type species of Anguloscalpellum , Scalpellum angulare Nilsson-Cantell, 1930 , falls within the genus Weltnerium as redefined in this paper (trapezoidal scutum; deep, transversely elongated receptacle for dwarf male; rostrum with broad triangular external surface), and is evidently not related closely to S. pedunculatum . Therefore, Graviscalpellum is resurrected from synonomy to include both the extant G. regina ( Pilsbry, 1907) and a number of fossil species from the Oligocene–Miocene of New Zealand ( Buckeridge, 1983). The molecular phylogeny of Lin et al. (2015: fig. 3) shows G. regina and G. pedunculatum as closly related taxa.
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 |
|
Class |
|
Order |
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Family |
Regioscalpellum
Gale, Andrew Scott 2016 |
Graviscalpellum grantmackiei
Buckeridge 1983 |
GRAVISCALPELLUM FOSTER, 1980
Foster 1980 |
Arcoscalpellum sanchezae
Withers 1953 |
Arcoscalpellum ungulatum
Withers 1953 |
Scalpellum regina
Pilsbry 1907 |
Scalpellum darwini
Hoek 1883 |
Scalpellum gigas
Hoek 1883 |
Scalpellum moluccanum
Hoek 1883 |
Scalpellum pedunculatum
Hoek 1883 |
Scalpellum regium
Thomson 1873 |
Pollicipes maximus
J. de C Sowerby 1829 |