Dicerobairdia buseri Forel, 2020

Forel, Marie-Béatrice, Kolar-Jurkovšek, Tea & Jurkovšek, Bogdan, 2020, Ostracods from the ‘ Raibl Beds’ (Carnian, Late Triassic) of Belca section in Karavanke Mountains, northwestern Slovenia, Geodiversitas 42 (21), pp. 377-407 : 384-386

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/geodiversitas2020v42a21

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:7EC0E4FA-D538-4CE2-91B8-D7F549C32985

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4488337

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/6B59784E-073E-4D76-8C70-B3706E500C8A

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:6B59784E-073E-4D76-8C70-B3706E500C8A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Dicerobairdia buseri Forel
status

sp. nov.

Dicerobairdia buseri Forel , n. sp.

( Fig. 4 View FIG O-U)

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:6B59784E-073E-4D76-8C70-B3706E500C8A

TYPE MATERIAL. — Holotype: left valve( Fig. 4O View FIG ), BE18 (GeoZS6146). — Paratype: right valve ( Fig. 4S View FIG ), BE18 (GeoZS6150).

EXAMINED MATERIAL. — One carapace, nine left valves, ten right valves and several fragments.

DERIVATION OF NAME. — In honour of Prof. Dr. Stanko Buser (University of Ljubljana, Slovenia) for his outstanding contribution to the knowledge of the Slovenian geology.

OCCURRENCE. — Nicoraella ? budaensis conodont zone, late Julian-?earliest Tuvalian,Carnian,Late Triassic, samples BE2, 17, 18, 21 ( Fig. 3 View FIG ), Belca section, ‘Raibl Beds’, Karavanke Mountains, Slovenia (this work).

DIAGNOSIS. — A new species with reticulate lateral surface and poorly expressed dorso-lateral ornaments.

DIMENSIONS. — Fig. 5C. View FIG

DESCRIPTION

A large and relatively thick-shelled species with subrectangular outline in lateral view; greatest height located at the anterodorsal angulation at both valves, greatest length below mid-height; dorsal margin tripartite at both valves with anterodorsal angulation c. 30° and posterodorsal angulation c. 55°; anterodorsal border straight and long (from c. 28% of maximum of length in adult forms, Fig. 4Q View FIG , to c. 32% in younger instars, Fig. 4T View FIG ); dorsal border long and straight to gently convex (from c. 49% of maximum of length in adult forms, Fig. 4Q View FIG , to c. 53% in younger instars, Fig. 4T View FIG ); posterodorsal border steep and relatively short (c. 20% of maximum of length in adult and younger forms), close to straight in the youngest form, with a terminal concavity that accentuates through ontogeny; ventral border long (from c. 57% of maximum of length in adults, Fig. 4Q View FIG , to c. 48% in younger instars, Fig. 4T View FIG ), with oral concavity located in anterior part; posteroventral border about 1/3rd of maximum of height, very convex and bordered with marginal denticles visible at well preserved specimens (e.g., Fig. 4Q, R, U View FIG ); anteroventral border longer than posteroventral border, gently convex and flanged by marginal denticles visible at well preserved specimens; anterior maximum of curvature large and located around to slightly below mid-height; posterior maximum of convexity narrower, located below 1/3rd of maximum of height; anterodorsal, dorsal, posterodorsal and posteroventral borders and upper part of anteroventral border laterally compressed; anterior margin bordered by a large and low ridge in lower 2/3 rd, which then runs perpendicular to it and parallel to ventral margin, ending at the laterally compressed posteroventral area; two small elongate and reduced horns are built parallel to anterodorsal and posterodorsal borders at both valves; lateral surface evenly reticulate, with preferential longitudinal organisation of the reticulation visible at some specimens.

DISCUSSION

Dicerobairdia buseri Forel , n. sp. occurs from samples BE17 to BE 21 in the Belca section, and it is relatively abundant in BE18 ( Fig. 3 View FIG ). Dicerobairdia buseri Forel , n. sp. differs from D. torulosa Kristan-Tollmann, 1970 from the late Ladinian, Middle Triassic, of Dolomites, Italy (Kristan-Tollmann 1970) by lacking the small ventrolateral ridges at both valves and by the stronger development of the sub-anterodorsal and subposterodorsal horns at adult stage. The new species also differs from D. acornuta Kristan-Tollmann, 1978 from the early Carnian, Late Triassic, of Dolomites, Italy (Kristan-Tollmann 1978) by its subdorsal ornamentation at the right valve, which consists of sub-anterodorsal and sub-posterodorsal reduced horns rather than a continuous subdorsal ridge.At the left valve, the dorsal ornamentation of D. buseri Forel , n. sp. differs in being sub-anterodorsal and sub-posterodorsal elongate horns rather than a continuous ridge as in D. acornuta. Dicerobairdia buseri Forel , n. sp. also shows secondary reticulation all over the lateral surface whereas D. acornuta is micromammillate.

The specimens of Dicerobairdia buseri Forel , n. sp. from Belca section are distributed into at least four ontogenetic stages, from A-3 to Adult in ascending order ( Fig. 5C View FIG ). Noteworthy, left valves only occur in A-1 and Adult stages, while A-3 and A-2 stages are only known by right valves. The ontogenetic development of D. buseri Forel , n. sp. is marked by an overall increase in the length of the ventral border. The development from A-3 to A-1 is dominated by the increase of the dimensions. The transition from A-1 to Adult records the enhancement of the ventral ridge and the terminal concavity at posterodorsal border.

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