Drepanoistodus cf. suberectus ( Branson & Mehl, 1933 )

Rasmussen, Jan Audun, Eriksson, Mats E. & Lindskog, Anders, 2021, Middle Ordovician Drepanoistodus (Vertebrata, Conodonta) from Baltica, with description of three new species, European Journal of Taxonomy 774, pp. 106-134 : 127

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2021.774.1533

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:DE794E6F-E3E8-48A6-B42F-163DD2B675F8

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5558722

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/038E0354-FFFB-FFAA-7CDB-FEFEFDE7F9AD

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Drepanoistodus cf. suberectus ( Branson & Mehl, 1933 )
status

 

Drepanoistodus cf. suberectus ( Branson & Mehl, 1933)

Fig. 6T View Fig

Drepanoistodus cf. suberectus ( Branson & Mehl, 1933) – Löfgren 2003: fig. 7s–u. — Mellgren & Eriksson 2010: fig. 7k (only). — Hints et al. 2012: fig. 6h.

Material examined

Four geniculate elements including three from the Lynna section .

Remarks

Drepanoistodus cf. suberectus is included in the present work because it superficially resembles Drepanoistodus viirae sp. nov. Originally, D. suberectus was described as Oistodus suberectus from the Upper Ordovician strata of Missouri, USA, by Branson & Mehl (1933), but it was not until 1966 that conodont specialists included the geniculate element in the apparatus (see Bergström & Sweet 1966 and Webers 1966, for details). The D. suberectus type locality near Ozora, Missouri, was located and restudied by Bergström & Leslie (2010) who documented the conodont fauna and illustrated three different elements of D. suberectus , including the geniculate element. The Upper Ordovician geniculate D. suberectus elements (e.g., Stauffer 1935; Nowlan 2002; Bergström & Leslie 2010) are generally more rounded anteriorly and carry more pronounced keels on the cusp than the three geniculate elements at hand, thus leading us to leave the Lynna River specimens in open nomenclature.

Drepanoistodus cf. suberectus occurs only sporadically in the Lynna River section samples. It is characterised by a short upper margin of the base compared to the free cusp (b/c ratio near 0.20 in the three specimens found). Angle A between the upper margin of the cusp and the carina on the cusp (see Fig. 3 View Fig ) varies considerably (41–52°) but it is wider than that of the other Drepanoistodus species described here. Moreover, it is typified by a convex basal margin; weakly rounded anterior margin, and a weakly developed carina on the straight cusp, which is located on the lower half part of the cusp.

Superficially, D. cf. suberectus resembles D. viirae sp. nov. because of the relatively short base, but the latter species is distinguished by a narrower angle A (see Fig. 3 View Fig ); wider sides anteriorly on the cusp; laterally compressed cusp with distinct keels, and a median, as opposed to a lower, carina.

Occurrence

The Yangtzeplacognathus crassus Zone at Lynna River (samples LY12-34, LY14-2 and LY14-5). Drepanoistodus cf. suberectus has also been documented from the L. variabilis Zone of Hällekis, Sweden (Mellgren & Eriksson 2010).

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