Cyrtodaria aff. rutupiensis ( Morris, 1852 )

Hryniewicz, Krzysztof, Amano, Kazutaka, Bitner, Maria Aleksandra, Hagström, Jonas, Kiel, Steffen, Klompmaker, Adiël A., Mörs, Thomas, Robins, Cristina M. & Kaim, Andrzej, 2019, A late Paleocene fauna from shallow-water chemosynthesis-based ecosystems, Spitsbergen, Svalbard, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 64 (1), pp. 101-141 : 123

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00554.2018

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E6189ABB-9B6F-4057-BB8D-798C9B0BE388

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10986933

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/320C87F4-464C-FFDB-FF1A-FB67FA63D8F0

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Cyrtodaria aff. rutupiensis ( Morris, 1852 )
status

 

Cyrtodaria aff. rutupiensis ( Morris, 1852)

Fig. 18 View Fig .

Material. —One butterflied specimen ( NRM-PZ Mo 183943a–b) with valves opened but still attached, from the upper Paleocene, Zachariassendalen, Spitsbergen, Svalbard.

Measurements. —NRM-PZ Mo 183943a–b: L, 43 mm; H, 16.9 mm; W, 5.4 mm.

Description. —Shell elongate, weakly inflated, edentulous, moderately thick, covered with commarginal growth lines. Umbones positioned roughly mid-hinge line, not prominent, dorsal margin composed of two straight, weakly inclined, anterior and posterior sections. Anterior and posterior shell margins rounded, gaping; anterior somewhat more rounded than posterior. Ventral shell margin straight with very weak sinus close to mid-line. Anterior adductor muscle scar teardrop-shaped, elongated along anterodorsal margin. Posterior adductor muscle scar shorter but precise shape unknown.

Remarks. —Elongate bivalves with a medially positioned umbo and a shape similar to the specimen of Cyrtodaria aff. rutupiensis ( Morris, 1852) figured herein were previously described and figured from the Paleocene of Fossildalen as belonging to at least three species of Solecurtus Blainville, 1824 , by Hägg (1925: pl. 6: 25–27). As those specimens have no visible transverse ornament characteristic of species of Solecurtus ( Hägg 1925: pl. 6: 27), they likely do not belong to Solecurtus and could be assigned to Cyrtodaria . Livšic (1974) mentioned Cyrtodaria sp. occurring in the “Storvola Formation”, an obsolete name for the Eocene Aspelintoppen Formation ( Dallmann 1999) overlying the Basilika Formation. Since Livšic (1974) did not provide any figures, we are unable to relate our material to his report. Cyrtodaria rutupiensis ( Morris, 1852) , a common species occurring in Paleocene deposits of western Spitsbergen ( Strauch 1972), the Thanet Formation in Kent, UK ( Ward 1978), the Prince Creek Formation in northern Alaska ( Marincovich 1993), and the Mount Moore Formation of Ellesmere Island in Arctic Canada ( Marincovich and Zinsmeister 1991), is very similar to the current species. However, we are unable to perform a more thorough comparison because only one specimen was available. Solecurtus (Macha) sp. from the Paleocene of Fossildalen has been included ( Hägg 1925: pl. 6: 26) into the synonymy list of C. rutupiensis by Marincovich (1993), but we are unable to relate Solecurtus (Macha) sp. to our material. Cyrtodaria katieae Marincovich, 1993 , from the Paleocene Prince Creek Formation in northern Alaska, USA, is elongated similarly to the Paleocene species from Svalbard; however, the umbo of C. katieae is located nearer to the anterior than in the present species. Cyrtodaria? minuta Speden, 1970 , from the Maastrichtian Fox Hills Formation in South Dakota, USA, has a small, thin shell (L 6.5–12 mm) that broadens substantially towards the posterior ( Speden 1970: 139, pl. 35: 4–11); in our view, it belongs to Saxicavella Fischer, 1878 , rather than to Cyrtodaria .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Bivalvia

Order

Adapedonta

Family

Hiatellidae

Genus

Cyrtodaria

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