Ogiva Jullien, 1882

Taylor, Paul D., Martha, Silviu O. & Gordon, Dennis P., 2018, Synopsis of ‘ onychocellid’ cheilostome bryozoan genera, Journal of Natural History (J. Nat. Hist.) 52 (25 - 26), pp. 1657-1721 : 1690-1691

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2018.1481235

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:63A31AD2-F049-42CB-A45B-557014DC286E

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EB8789-FFCA-4454-A1F9-71B2FBBDF901

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Ogiva Jullien, 1882
status

 

Genus Ogiva Jullien, 1882 View in CoL

( Figure 20 View Figure 20 )

Type species

Eschara actaea d’ Orbigny, 1851 View in CoL , by original designation. Cretaceous, Senonian [?Coniacian], Fécamp, Seine-Maritime, Normandy, France . Canu (1900, p. 393) inexplicably gave two type

species for Ogiva View in CoL , one Recent ( Vincularia elegans d’ Orbigny, 1851 ) and the other fossil (Eschara santonensis d’ Orbigny, 1850), neither of which is valid as the type species of the genus.

Diagnosis

Colony erect bifoliate, narrowly palmate ( Figure 20 View Figure 20 (a)). Autozooids subhexagonal, rounded distally; zooidal boundaries sharply raised. Cryptocyst extensive, depressed. Gymnocyst lacking. Opesia terminal, occupying about half of frontal surface; subcircular to longitudinally elliptical, lacking opesiular indentations and lateral constrictions. Ovicells unknown. Avicularia vicarious, symmetrical ( Figure 20 View Figure 20 (b,c)), about the same size as an autozooid; opesia central, longitudinally elliptical; rostrum long, triangular, end rounded, floor smooth.

Remarks

The elliptical shape of the opesia in both the autozooids and avicularia was highlighted by Jullien (1882) as an important diagnostic character of Ogiva . The genus name is misleading as it is derived from an ogival arch, which is a pointed Gothic arch, unlike the shape of the opesia in this bryozoan. In addition to the type species, Jullien listed in his new genus 11 Cretaceous species described originally by d’ Orbigny (1851–1854) and two Tertiary species, one questionably. Canu (1900) added numerous additional species to Ogiva , which he treated as a subgenus of Onychocella . By 1929, however, he considered Ogiva to be ‘an inexact Cretaceous genus’ ( Canu and Bassler 1929, p. 48).

Among species more recently described or attributed to this genus are Ogiva incompta Gordon and Taylor, 1999 , from the Paleocene (Thanetian) to Eocene (Ypresian), Red Bluff Tuff, Chatham Islands, New Zealand, and O . promonturiorum Voigt, 1924 and O. ellinorvoigtae Martha et al., 2015 , both from the Santonian of Germany. As in the type species, ovicells have not been recognised with certainty in any of these three species.

Range

Cretaceous [?Coniacian] to Late Miocene (Tortonian). The youngest species of Ogiva appears to be O. elongata ( Canu and Bassler, 1935) from Muddy Creek in Victoria, Australia.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Bryozoa

Class

Gymnolaemata

Order

Cheilostomatida

Family

Onychocellidae

Loc

Ogiva Jullien, 1882

Taylor, Paul D., Martha, Silviu O. & Gordon, Dennis P. 2018
2018
Loc

actaea d’ Orbigny, 1851

Canu F 1900: 393
1900
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