Bathyisognomon smithwickensis, Hickman, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5070/P940561331 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1756B24A-813B-423F-896F-91B21FF58A79 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11505121 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/3E81A342-9A89-4CBD-8A0B-B84164CA2CB0 |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:3E81A342-9A89-4CBD-8A0B-B84164CA2CB0 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Bathyisognomon smithwickensis |
status |
sp. nov. |
BATHYISOGNOMON SMITHWICKENSIS View in CoL N. SP.
FIGS. 12A–F View Figure 12 , 13A–C View Figure 13
Isognomon clarki ( Effinger, 1938) Squires (1989) , in part, p. 279.
Zoobank LSID — urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:3E81A342-9A89-4CBD-8A0B-B84164CA2CB0
Diagnosis —Same as diagnosis of the genus, which is monotypic.
Description —The hinge line is slightly arcuate and there is no distinct posterior wing or auricle. The beaks are produced, forming a narrowly acute angle (40–50°). There is a sharp anterior byssal indentation beneath the beaks followed by a nearly straight anterior shell margin. The posterior and ventral margins are evenly rounded posterior to the hinge line. The ratio of height to length=0.7.
Discussion —The description of this species is necessarily broad and subject to qualification based on additional specimens and better preservation of the outer calcitic shell and ornamentation that are not present in the type material. The thickness of the interior aragonitic shell is unknown due to exfoliation of individual layers, which is common in fossil isognomonids with disintegration of the organic layers separating successive thin nacreous increments. This phenomenon is illustrated here ( Fig. 14A–C View Figure 14 ) in a set of stacked layers of isognomonid nacre ( UCMP B-5162) from Miocene strata of the Calvert Cliffs, Chesapeake Bay, Maryland.
Squires (1989) conservatively assigned all isognomonid specimens from the Eocene of California, Oregon, and Washington to Isognomon clarki , considering it a single highly variable species with preservation inadequate for morphological separation. Specimens described as Isognomon n. sp.? by Givens (1974) from older Eocene strata of the Juncal Formation in California (Loc. UCR 4752) have a similar mytiliform shape but are proportionally wider and less long than the new Keasey species and come from a calcareous sandy conglomerate lens in a shallower depositional facies. Word-of-mouth references to Keasey specimens in private collections from the Smithwick Quarry could not be confirmed, and access to the abandoned site is now prohibited.
Etymology —The name refers to the now abandoned Smithwick Concrete Products Haydite Quarry, commercial source for manufacture of lite-rock, a mid-20 th century strong, lightweight aggregate material used in dam and bridge construction. Large quantities of volcanic ash in the massive tuffaceous siltstone beds at the Smithwick and Empire Quarries produced a composite of exceptional quality.
Material examined —The description is based on the two double-valved type specimens ( Figs. 12A–F View Figure 12 ) and a tentatively-assigned large, double-valved partial specimen ( Fig. 13A–C View Figure 13 ) from the upper middle member of the Keasey Formation.
Holotype — UCMP 110744 View Materials , length 10.2 mm, height 8.6 mm. Loc. UCMP IP7984.
Paratype — UCMP 110745 View Materials , length 7.1 mm, height 5.0 mm. Loc. UCMP IP7984 View Materials .
Tentatively-assigned —Loc. LACMIP 5806, length (incomplete) 6.5 mm, height (incomplete) 7.5 mm.
Type locality— UCMP IP7984. Upper middle member.
The ancient order Pectinoidea originated in the Carboniferous. Two of the major clades recognized by Waller (1978, 1991, 2006) are represented in the Keasey Formation. Both appeared in the Middle Triassic. The pectinids are here recognized as having a ctenolium ( Fig. 16C View Figure 16 ), a feature that is absent in propeamussiids. However, the ctenolium is variable in its morphological expression and may have arisen multiple times as a series very fine denticles along the ventral margin of byssal notch, serving functionally to separate fine byssal threads and increase attachment stability. Pectinoidean family-group relationships remain unresolved, and molecular data further suggest that propeamussiids are not monophyletic (Smedley et al. 2019). While supraspecific allocation of the Keasey taxa is necessarily provisional, intensive collecting has yielded well-preserved specimens that are morphologically distinct and assignable to family-group shell morphotypes and ecotypes.
Stratigraphic range —Carboniferous–Holocene.
Pectinids are the best known of the pteriomorph bivalves. Commonly known as scallops, the family includes many living and fossil species in cosmopolitan genera. Shell microstructure and mineralogy and the prismatic or foliated calcite of exterior microsculpture are often exceptionally well preserved in fossil pectinids, and the abundance and short stratigraphic ranges of many species have made them especially important in Cenozoic biostratigraphic zonation and correlation. The fossil record of Northeastern Pacific pectinids is predominantly a shallow water record. Less well known are the small-shelled deep-water (> 200 m) pectinids and propeamussiids (mud pectens and glass scallops). They are the most abundant bivalves in the Keasey fauna. However, they are seldom collected and poorly represented in museum collections because the thin translucent shells are fragile and often crushed. They often occur in dense but highly localized aggregations ( Fig. 15A–D View Figure 15 ). Shells in some of these assemblages are peculiarly associated with large numbers of small echinoid spines ( Fig. 15C View Figure 15 ) or ambercolored fragments of fish scales ( Fig. 15D View Figure 15 ). Preservation is usually inadequate for generic and species recognition, and even when delicate ornamentation is well preserved it is difficult to photograph. Low angle illumination required for photography often produces optical illusions in which negative features appear positive. Scanning Electron Microscopy contributes significantly to characterizing microsculpture of the new species described below.
Stratigraphic range —Lower Triassic–Holocene.
UCMP |
University of California Museum of Paleontology |
UCR |
University of California |
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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Genus |
Bathyisognomon smithwickensis
Hickman, Carole S. 2023 |
Isognomon clarki ( Effinger, 1938 )
Squires 1989 |