Mytoconula, Horný, 2009

Horný, Radvan J., 2009, Patelliconus Horný, 1961 And Mytoconula Gen. N. (Mollusca, Tergomya) From The Ordovician Of Perunica, Acta Musei Nationalis Pragae Series B 65 (1 - 2), pp. 25-36 : 30-34

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13183168

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A0878C-9634-FFC8-FE9C-E527F0E642D3

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Mytoconula
status

gen. nov.

Genus Mytoconula View in CoL gen. n.

T y p e s p e c i e s: Mytoconula vonkai sp. n., Middle Ordovician, upper Darriwilian, Dobrotivá Formation; Bohemia, Barrandian Area.

D e r i v a t i o n o m i n i s: Ater the village of Mýto near the type locality, with suffix -conula (Lat.), a small cone. Feminine.

D i a g n o s i s: Genus of the family Protoconchoididae with low, conical, thin-shelled conch, with apex shifted about a half way between the shell centre and the anterior apertural margin; early shell is narrower, sharply separated by a groove from the wider teleoconch; aperture planar, widely ovate in outline, l/w ratio 1.12–1.39; fine radial striation of shell interior; concentric muscle zones disintegrat- ed into a series of small scars.

D i s c u s s i o n: Dense radial striation of the internal shell surface may represent an ancestral type of musculature of tergomyan molluscs, traceable in several early Palaeozoic genera – e. g. Pilina KOKEN in KOKEN et PERNER, 1925 ( P. liaoningensis YU WEN et YOCHELSON, 1999 ); Bipulvina YOCHELSON, 1958 ( B. croftsae YOCHELSON, 1958 ); Drahomira BARRANDE in PERNER, 1903 ( D. kriziana HORNÝ, 2005 ), and even the cyrtonellids – Sinuitopsis PERNER, 1903 ( S. neglecta BARRANDE in PERNER, 1903). In this connection Cambridium HORNÝ, 1957 should also be mentioned. This middle Cambrian genus, originaly a representative of the order Cambridiida HORNÝ in KNIGHT et YOCHELSON, 1960, may be classified as an ancient tergomyan with strongly emphasized radial structure.

Patelliconus osloensis YOCHELSON, 1977 View in CoL from Upper

Ordovician of Norway (Grimsöy Formation, upper Kat-

ian) has a radially striated internal shell surface. Yochelson (p. 311) describes this structure as closely spaced, irregular ridges near the margin, which may have been areas of blood vessels leading to the mantle margin or may have been connected with attachment of the mantle to the shell. According to his fig. 2K, these ridges bifurcate or trifurcate adaper-

turally, being similar to structures in Pilina liaoningensis

YU WEN et YOCHELSON, 1999 or e. g. Cambridium nikiforovae HORNÝ, 1957 . For these reasons, in spite of the subcentral apex, I prefer to classify this species as Mytoconula osloensis ( YOCHELSON, 1977) .

S p e c i e s i n c l u d e d: Mytoconula vonkai sp. n.,

Middle Ordovician, upper Darriwilian, Dobrotivá Formation; Bohemia, Barrandian Area.

Mytoconula vonkai sp. n.

Text-figs 5–8 View Text-fig View Text-fig View Text-fig View Text-fig

H o l o t y p e: specimen NM L 31983, figured here in

Text-fig. 5. View Text-fig

P a r a t y p e: specimen NM L 31984, figured here in

Text-fig. 6. View Text-fig

S t r a t u m t y p i c u m: Middle Ordovician, upper

Darriwilian, Dobrotivá Formation.

T y p e l o c a l i t y: Mýto near Holoubkov.

D e r i v a t i o n o m i n i s: Named after ing.

Vladimír Vonka, collector and palaeontology enthusiast ,

who found important specimens for our understanding of morphology.

M a t e r i a l: 22 specimens, including the type specimens, deposited in collections of the National Museum , Prague .

D i a g n o s i s: see the genus.

D e s c r i p t i o n: The low cone-like shell is widely ovoid in outline with a subcentral, anteriorly shifted apex. The average length:width ratio is 1.25 (14 specimens measured). The smallest specimen, NM L 38765, is 4.20 mm long, 3.5 mm wide, and 0.6 mm high, the largest, NM L 38761a, is 12.10 mm long and 10.8 mm wide. The growth structures indicate that the early shell aperture had an almost rounded outline (NM L 38764b). The apex is shifted towards the apertural margin, interpreted as anterior. The early shell has steeper sides, about 90° (NM L 38768); apical angle of mature shells reaches 120°. Both the anterior and posterior apertural margins are rounded. The anterior side is steeper than the posterior, which is shallowly convex between the apex and posterior margin in mature specimens. The apertural margin is planar, sharp, periodically slightly flaring in mature specimens (NM L 38914). The shell wall is very thin, maximum thickness being about 0.05 mm. Its composition and structure are unknown, being weathered and substituted by limonite. External sculpture consists of simple, somewhat irregular and unequal growth lines (NM L 38914, Text-fig. 5d View Text-fig ). Two or three periodical rugae corresponding to the location of concentric muscle zones are developed predominantly in the posterior area of shell (NM L 38914); these structures are weak or absent in the majority of specimens studied.

As the shells are small and the shell wall is thin, the muscle insertions are rather small and indistinct. Furthermore, the weathered structure of the surface of internal moulds is not smooth enough to reflect such fine details. Several specimens preserved as internal moulds showed numerous fine radial ridges (grooves on the internal shell surface) running from the periphery of the early shell and almost reaching the apertural margin (NM L 38914, NM L 38767, NM L 31983; Text-fig. 5 View Text-fig ). When crossing the periodical rugae of the shell, these weak ridges increase in strength and breadth and have the character of short muscle scars (NM L 31893, NM L 38764c, Text-fig. 7 View Text-fig ). Two slightly stronger diverging ribs were developed in the posterolateral area (NM L 31893, NM L 31894, NM L 38765; Text-fig. 6 View Text-fig ). The pallial line and associated structures have not been ascertained.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Family

Protoconchoididae

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Family

Protoconchoididae

Genus

Mytoconula

Loc

Mytoconula

Horný, Radvan J. 2009
2009
Loc

Patelliconus osloensis

YOCHELSON 1977
1977
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