Abertella gualichensis Martínez et al., 2005

Mooi, Rich, Martínez, Sergio A., Del Río, Claudia J. & Ramos, Maria Inês Feijó, 2018, Late Oligocene - Miocene non-lunulate sand dollars of South America: Revision of abertellid taxa and descriptions of two new families, two new genera, and a new species, Zootaxa 4369 (3), pp. 301-326 : 317-318

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4369.3.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:97CAA2FC-F3CC-407B-8768-2BB9DE037C86

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5961802

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0392BB4B-FFA2-F557-7D92-F96AFAA2FE2D

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Abertella gualichensis Martínez et al., 2005
status

 

Abertella gualichensis Martínez et al., 2005

Figures 1 View FIGURE 1 , 4 View FIGURE 4 .

2005 Abertella gualichensis Martínez et al. : 1230–1232, figs. 2–3.

Diagnosis. Abertella with pronounced, marginally-directed, curved extensions of oral ambulacral plates joining proximal edges of first interambulacral postbasicoronal plates in posterior interambulacrum; posterior notch shallow but acute; paired interambulacra narrower, than in other Abertella , not narrowing near the ambitus. Type material studied. Holotype MACN-Pi 4714, paratypes MACN-Pi 4705, 4706, 4709. Description. See Martínez et al. (2005).

Occurrence. A. gualichensis is recorded only from the earliest middle Miocene of Salina del Gualicho, Río Negro Province, Argentina in the lower part of the Gran Bajo del Gualicho Formation ( Fig. 1 View FIGURE 1 ).

Remarks. In the original description, A. gualichensis was distinguished from other Abertella largely by its broad but shallow posterior notch and its relatively narrow, non-alate test compared to other members of the genus. In addition, the separation of the oral interambulacral postbasicoronals from the basicoronal plates is less pronounced in A. gualichensis than in most other Abertella , with the exception of A. pirabensis , and the oral interambulacra of A. gualichensis do not widen and then markedly attenuate as they approach the ambitus.

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF