Thelodus visvaldi, Karatajūtē-Talimaa & Märss, 2002

Karatajūtē-Talimaa, Valentina & Märss, Tiiu, 2002, Upper Silurian thelodonts from Severnaya Zemlya Archipelago (Russia), Geodiversitas 24 (2), pp. 405-443 : 430-435

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5375097

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AB0B878D-0F63-FFE6-8000-F9E5B6D825DD

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Thelodus visvaldi
status

sp. nov.

Thelodus visvaldi n. sp. ( Figs 17 View FIG ; 18 View FIG ; 19 View FIG A-D)

Thelodus sp. 1 Märss & Karajūtē- Talimaa 2002: fig. 1. HOLOTYPE. — Pi 7542 ( Fig. 17F View FIG ).

ETYMOLOGY. — Named after Dr. Visvaldis Kuršs, Riga, Latvian State University, who participated in the field work on Severnaya Zemlya in 1978.

TYPE LOCALITY AND AGE. — Sample MF 34-1, Cape October, October Revolution Island, Severnaya Zemlya Archipelago, Ludlow, Upper Silurian.

MATERIAL EXAMINED. — About 700 scales.

OCCURRENCE. — Samples MF 34-1, Cape October; 2-3, 2-4, 2-7, 2-23, Matusevich River, October Revolution Island; 5m-1, 5d, 5i, 5zh- 1,5e, Pioneer Island, Severnaya Zemlya Archipelago, Ust- Spokojnaya Formation, Ludlow, Upper Silurian. On Pioneer Island Thelodus visvaldi n. sp. occurs also in the Wenlock part of the section (see Fig. 1 View FIG ).

DIAGNOSIS. — Scale crown quadrangular to oblong, with longitudinal grooves in flat surface or with smooth flat crown surface. Between grooves, longitudinal ridges often split into two parallel ones. The neck is without vertical ridges. Typical Thelodus histology.

DESCRIPTION

Morphology

Crowns of head scales quadrangular or round ( Fig. 17A View FIG ) with short ridges and grooves anterolaterally; postero-lateral margins serrated. The scales are small, the length of head scales 0.4- 0.5 mm, their width 0.3-0.5 mm. In the same sample the quadrangular scales with flat and smooth crown surface ( Fig. 18 View FIG A-G) are rather numerous. We tend to believe that these scales covered the body behind the rostrum and in front of the dorsal and ventral fins, and correspond to the transitional scales. The measurements of the smooth scales are: in average 0.5 × 0.5 mm, the maximum length 1.4 mm and width 1.0 mm. The rest of the trunk was covered with relatively high scales with a quadrangular or oblong crown that was covered with longitudinal grooves and ridges ( Figs 17B View FIG , D-I; 18H-T) nearly parallel in the medial part of the crown. Ridges are often divided into two. Narrow unsculptured margins characterize the trunk scales. The measurements of the scales are: length 0.4-0.9 mm and width 0.4-0.8 mm; in the holotype ( Fig. 17F View FIG ) the corresponding numbers are 0.6 and 0.5 mm. The neck is distinct and relatively high. The base ( Fig. 17K, L View FIG ) is smaller than the crown, rhomboidal, sometimes rather wide. Narrow and small scales ( Fig. 17 View FIG M-O) were covering from the posterior part of the trunk. The scale in Fig. 17O View FIG is only 0.4 mm long and 0.2 mm wide.

In Fig. 17J View FIG is a very small scale, posteriorly broken (length 0.4 mm), but, still, trilobate shape is recognizable. The crown surface is typical for the new species. Its position on the body is unknown.

Histology ( Fig. 19 View FIG A-D)

Dentine tubules start from the pulp cavity and are directed towards the base, neck and crown ( Fig. 19B, D View FIG ). The tubules are comparatively wide in the lower part of the crown; they branch on some levels, and become narrower in the upper crown portion. The longest and most straight dentine tubules occur in the posterior crown portion ( Fig. 19 View FIG A-C).

COMPARISON

Trunk scales of Thelodus visvaldi n. sp. are quadrangular, their crowns carrying nearly parallel grooves and ridges in the medial part, the ridges being often bifurcated. In outline they resemble T. sculptilis Gross, 1967 , in having relatively short scales but the latter has only few ridges on its crowns. The sculpture of both T. visvaldi n. sp. and T. schmidti (= T. laevis ) (Pander, 1856) is formed by longitudinal steep deep grooves and ridges but in the new species the ridges and grooves are more numerous and more parallel the medial part of the crown. The whole set of scales of T. parvidens is not known and in it richly ridged scales are not described. Thelodus carinatus (Pander, 1856) has gentle ridges on flat crown surface; some scales described here (e.g., Fig. 4J View FIG ) do resemble it. Sculpture of T. visvaldi n. sp. and T. admirabilis Märss, 1982 differ in ridge/groove arrangement; the posterior prong is absent in T. visvaldi n. sp.

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