Chainodictyon minor Ulrich, 1890

Ernst, Andrej, Claussen, Anna Lene, Seuss, Barbara & Wyse Jackson, Patrick N., 2022, Stenolaemate bryozoans from the Graham Formation, Pennsylvanian (Virgilian) at Lost Creek Lake, Texas, USA, Palaeontologia Electronica (a 15) 25 (2), pp. 1-56 : 18

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26879/1174

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A4A07D50-3DDB-4E45-A255-1ECCF45F147A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11032558

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C387F1-9A0D-3969-2EB4-06D6F6914B76

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Chainodictyon minor Ulrich, 1890
status

 

Chainodictyon minor Ulrich, 1890 View in CoL

Figures 9 View FIGURE 9 C-G, 10A; Appendix

1890 Chainodictyon laxum var. minor Ulrich , p. 640, pl. 62, figs. 3-3a.

Material. SNSB-BSPG 2020 XCI 37, SNSB-BSPG 2020 XCI 38, SNSB-BSPG 2020 XCI 42, SNSB-BSPG 2020 XCI 106, SNSB-BSPG 2020XCI 125.

Description. Reticulate colonies formed by anastomosing branches. Branches frequently bifurcating, flattened, bearing 2–4 alternating rows of autozooecia; dorsal wall rugose, 0.30–0.79 mm wide. Fenestrules elongate, rounded-polygonal, 0.65–1.10 mm wide, and 1.26–1.90 mm long. Autozooecial apertures oval. Diaphragms not observed. Hemisepta absent. Styles absent. Leptozooecia common to abundant, small, occurring between autozooecia on the obverse side of branches. Autozooecial walls in endozone 0.013 – 0.020 mm thick, hyaline; finely laminated in exozone.

Remarks. Chainodictyon minor Ulrich, 1890 , differs from C. laxum Foerste, 1887 , in having a smaller size of fenestrules (fenestrule width 0.65– 1.10 mm vs. ca. 1.3 mm in C. laxum ; fenestrule length 1.26–1.90 mm vs. 2.5 mm in C. laxum ). Chainodictyon minor differs from C. angustum Schulga-Nesterenko, 1952 , from the Lower Permian (Asselian) of Russia in having smaller fenestrules (fenestrule width 0.65–1.10 mm vs. 1.2–2.0 mm in C. angustum ; fenestrule length 1.26–1.90 mm vs. 3.6–4.1 mm in C. angustum ).

Occurrence. Pennsylvanian; USA, Illinois. Graham Formation, Pennsylvanian (Virgilian); TXV-200 (“Spillway section at Lost Creek Lake”), Texas, USA.

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