WOS000374217200002.Pdf

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

WOS000374217200002.Pdf See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/301341903 On the fossil alga Elianella elegans PFENDER & BASSE, 1948, and its so-called lookalikes, with description of Elianella brasiliana n.sp Revision of the Juliette PFENDER Collection.... Article in Carnets de Geologie · April 2016 DOI: 10.4267/2042/59920 CITATIONS READS 6 93 1 author: Bruno Granier Université de Bretagne Occidentale 187 PUBLICATIONS 1,402 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Stratigraphy of Lebanon View project Aptian stratotypes and GSSP View project All content following this page was uploaded by Bruno Granier on 18 April 2016. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Carnets Geol. 16 (6) On the fossil alga Elianella elegans PFENDER & BASSE, 1948, and its so-called lookalikes, with description of Elianella brasiliana n.sp. Revision of the Juliette PFENDER Collection. Part 1 Bruno GRANIER 1 Dimas DIAS-BRITO 2 Abstract: According to some authors, the three fossil algal forms discussed in this paper, Cordilites cretosus (REUS, 1846), Elianella elegans PFENDER & BASSE, 1948, and Parachaetetes asvapatii PIA in RAO & PIA, 1936, are synonyms. However, we document that they represent three discrete species. The genus Elianella PFENDER & BASSE, 1948, gets unique features that make it easy to discriminate; we describe a new species from Albian limestones of Brazil. The other two genera, Cordilites POČTA, 1887, and Para- chaetetes DENINGER, 1906, share some common features, such as having a thallus made of a lattice-net- work with columns (filaments) and rows. However, on the basis of their diagnostic criteria, the species Cordilites cretosus and Parachaetetes asvapatii should not be confused. Key Words: Rhodogorgonales; Elianellaceae; Solenoporacea; Cordilites; Elianella; Parachaetetes. Citation: GRANIER B. & DIAS-BRITO D. (2016).- On the fossil alga Elianella elegans PFENDER & BASSE, 1948, and its so-called lookalikes, with description of Elianella brasiliana n.sp. Revision of the Juliette PFENDER Collection. Part 1.- Carnets Geol., Madrid, vol. 16, no. 6, p. 213-229. Résumé : À propos de l'algue Elianella elegans PFENDER & BASSE, 1948, et ses soit-disants semblables, avec la description de Elianella brasiliana n.sp. Révision de la Collection Juliette PFENDER. 1e partie.- D'après certains auteurs, les trois formes fossiles algaires discutées dans cette publication, Cordilites cretosus (REUS, 1846), Elianella elegans PFENDER & BASSE, 1948, et Parachaetetes asvapatii PIA in RAO & PIA, 1936, sont synonymes. Nous démontrons cependant qu'elles constituent trois espèces distinctes. Le genre Elianella PFENDER & BASSE, 1948, a des caractéristiques uniques qui le ren- dent facile à identifier. Nous décrivons d'ailleurs une nouvelle espèce provenant de calcaires albiens du Brésil. Les deux autres genres, Cordilites POČTA, 1887, et Parachaetetes DENINGER, 1906, partagent quel- ques caractères communs, notamment celui d'avoir un thalle constitué par un réseau de cellules ayant l'aspect d'une grille avec des colonnes (filaments) et des rangées. Toutefois, sur la base de leurs critères diagnostiques, les espèces Cordilites cretosus et Parachaetetes asvapatii ne devraient normalement pas être confondues. Mots-clefs : Rhodogorgonales ; Elianellaceae ; Solenoporacea ; Cordilites ; Elianella ; Parachaetetes. Introduction nella elegans and Cordilites cretosus, POIGNANT (1980a) stated that "il s'agit en fait de la même The present paper focuses on Elianella ele- forme" [as a matter of fact it is the same form]; FENDER ASSE gans P & B , 1948, and two "lookali- the same year, POIGNANT (1980b) again conclu- kes": Cordilites cretosus (REUS, 1846), and ded that "ces trois formes sont synonymes" Parachaetetes asvapatii PIA in RAO & PIA, 1936. [these three forms are synonymous]. According Paleophycologists, i.e., those people assuming to MOUSSAVIAN (1989) and STOCKAR (2000), Elia- they were dealing with fossil algae, and other nella elegans is "a younger synonym of Para- paleontologists, i.e., those considering they chaetetes asvapatii". However, in our opinion, were dealing with Cnidaria or Porifera, have they represent three discrete species that have treated these three taxa either as individual often been misidentified. For instance, the Elia- OIGNANT MAUDRIC HAFFAUT species (e.g., P & A du C , nella elegans reported by DELOFFRE (1967) from 1970) or as synonyms. In the latest case they the Danian interval in the SNPA exploration well have treated either the three of them or only a Bastennes-Lonné l (FB1, Aquitaine, SW France) pair as synonyms. For instance, regarding Elia- is a genuine Parachaetetes DENINGER, 1906 (cf. 1 "Cátedra Franco-Brasileira no Estado de São Paulo 2015", UNESP - Universidade Estadual Paulista, Center for Geosciences Applied to Petroleum (UNESPetro), Caixa Postal 178, Av. 24 A, no. 1515, Bela Vista, CEP13506-900 - Rio Claro - SP (Brazil) Dépt. STU, Fac. Sci. Tech., UBO, CS 93837, F-29238 Brest (France) [email protected] Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, The University of Kansas, 1200 Sunnyside Avenue, Lawrence, Kansas 66045 (USA) [email protected] 2 UNESP - Universidade Estadual Paulista, Center for Geosciences Applied to Petroleum (UNESPetro) & Departamen- to de Geologia Aplicada, Caixa Postal 178, Av. 24 A, no. 1515, Bela Vista, CEP13506-900 - Rio Claro - SP (Brazil) [email protected] Published online in final form (pdf) on April 14, 2016 [Editor: Michel MOULLADE; technical editor: Bruno GRANIER; language editor: Phil SALVADOR] 213 Carnets Geol. 16 (6) Parachaetetes asvapatii), as documented here- after. We report and illustrate below the main features of these three species in order to pre- vent them being confused again in the future. Material studied Ideally, this kind study would have required access to all the type materials, which was not feasible in the present case. However, the material studied here comprises thin sections from several researchers' collections: PFENDER (topotypic material), JOHNSON, and EMBERGER – DELOFFRE, as well as Brazilian material collected more recently, which display well-preserved specimens documenting diagnostic features. Considering Elianella elegans PFENDER & BASSE, 1948, the first author (B.G.) found only one thin section in the Juliette PFENDER Col- lection (Fig. 1.A). It is not one of the thin sections with the specimens originally illustra- ted by the authors (PFENDER & BASSE, 1948, Pl. XII, figs. 1-3), because this set is probably lost, but this thin section is marked "37 EB16", "NW de Lohaosy" (Ampanihy, Toliary), and "Calc. à Algues", i.e., it is a topotypic material from the Paleocene of S Madagascar. This specimen (Fig. 1.B) is selected here as the neotype. While investigating the JOHNSON Collection at Figure 1: A) Scan of the thin section marked "37 the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural EB16", "NW de Lohaosy", and "Calc. à Algues", Ju- History, the first author identified within a small liette PFENDER Collection; B) photomicrograph of the set of thin sections nice specimens of Cordilites neotype; C) detail with longitudinal sections of fila- cretosus (REUS, 1846) in one thin section mar- ments. [B scale bar 5 mm ; C scale bar 500 µm] ked D619-a-629 and bearing "Puerto Rico" as geographical label. The remaining thin sections yield "mid" Cretaceous (=Aptian-Cenomanian) Taxonomic affinities foraminifera, i.e., undetermined orbitolinidids. The three forms studied were formerly ascri- The material from the DELOFFRE Collection bed to the Family Solenoporaceae PIA, 1927, a was combined with that of the EMBERGER group of extinct "calcareous algae", because Collection as both consist of 27 thin sections of they share some morphological features: A) similar origin (core samples from the intervals they are either encrusting or forming free struc- 222.36-233.75 with a BGh1 label and 223.03- tures; B) their framework is made of erected 233.53 with a Bastennes 1 label, Danian in age, filaments, more or less densely juxtaposed, and both from the SNPA exploration well with common to rare horizontal partitions (i.e., Bastennes-Lonné I - FB1, Aquitaine, SW Fran- they are pluricellular algae), defining a more or ce). less preserved lattice-network with columns Most of the studied Brazilian Albian-Ceno- and rows; C) their mineralization is intracellu- manian material is registered in the collection lar, centripetal (starting from the cell walls in- of the "UNESPetro - Centro de Geociências Apli- wards), and consists of elongated fibrous calcite cadas ao Petróleo, UNESP - Universidade Esta- (probably high-Mg calcite) crystals, another dual Paulista, Rio Claro" (São Paulo, Brazil); feature that justifies their ascription to the red another part, consisting of a limited number of algae. However, D) reproductive organs (possi- thin sections, is deposited with LPB ("Labora- bly external) are unknown contrary to the re- toire de Paléontologie de Brest") numbers in the cords in its sister families, e.g., Hapalidiaceae collections of the "Département des Sciences de GRAY, Sporolithaceae VERHEIJ or Graticulaceae la Terre et de l'Univers, Université de Bretagne RIDING & BROOKE. Occidentale, Brest" (France). 214 Carnets Geol. 16 (6) Last but not least, RIDING (2004) demonstra- ted that the type of the genus Solenopora, S. spongioides DYBOWSKI, 1877, is actually "a chaetetid sponge, not an alga". The first author (B.G.) introduces hereafter the Family Elianella- ceae
Recommended publications
  • Boron-Containing Organic Pigments from a Jurassic Red Alga
    Boron-containing organic pigments from a Jurassic red alga Klaus Wolkensteina,1, Jürgen H. Grossb, and Heinz Falkc aInstitute of Analytical Chemistry, Johannes Kepler University Linz, 4040 Linz, Austria; bInstitute of Organic Chemistry, University of Heidelberg, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany; and cInstitute of Organic Chemistry, Johannes Kepler University Linz, 4040 Linz, Austria Edited by Victoria J. Orphan, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, and accepted by the Editorial Board September 23, 2010 (received for review June 10, 2010) Organic biomolecules that have retained their basic chemical oxide (DMSO). The reddish-colored extracts were purified by structures over geological periods (molecular fossils) occur in a wide solid-phase extraction and characterized by HPLC–diode array range of geological samples and provide valuable paleobiological, detection–electrospray ionization–mass spectrometry (HPLC- paleoenvironmental, and geochemical information not attainable DAD-ESI-MS). From a large Solenopora sample (102.5 g) from from other sources. In rare cases, such compounds are even France, 1.1 mg of crude pigment isolate was obtained as an in- preserved with their specific functional groups and still occur within tensely crimson-colored organic residue (Fig. S1). HPLC analysis the organisms that produced them, providing direct information on of the pigments revealed numerous compounds with similar UV- the biochemical inventory of extinct organisms and their possible visible spectra, with the prominent group at retention time of evolutionary relationships. Here we report the discovery of an 8.0–10.0 min showing a major broad absorption band at 520 nm exceptional group of boron-containing compounds, the borolitho- and a minor one at 420 nm (Fig.
    [Show full text]
  • Coralline Red Algae from the Silurian of Gotland Indicate That the Order Corallinales (Corallinophycidae, Rhodophyta) Is Much Older Than Previously Thought
    See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/330432279 Coralline red algae from the Silurian of Gotland indicate that the order Corallinales (Corallinophycidae, Rhodophyta) is much older than previously thought Article in Palaeontology · January 2019 DOI: 10.1111/pala.12418 CITATIONS READS 4 487 3 authors: Sebastian Teichert William J. Woelkerling Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen-Nürnberg La Trobe University 29 PUBLICATIONS 249 CITATIONS 149 PUBLICATIONS 4,804 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE SEE PROFILE Axel Munnecke Friedrich-Alexander-University of Erlangen-Nürnberg 201 PUBLICATIONS 5,073 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: Cephalopod Taphonomy: from soft-tissues to shell material View project Reef recovery after the end-Ordovician extinction View project All content following this page was uploaded by Sebastian Teichert on 23 January 2019. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. [Palaeontology, 2019, pp. 1–15] CORALLINE RED ALGAE FROM THE SILURIAN OF GOTLAND INDICATE THAT THE ORDER CORALLINALES (CORALLINOPHYCIDAE, RHODOPHYTA) IS MUCH OLDER THAN PREVIOUSLY THOUGHT by SEBASTIAN TEICHERT1 , WILLIAM WOELKERLING2 and AXEL MUNNECKE1 1Fachgruppe Pal€aoumwelt, GeoZentrum Nordbayern, Friedrich-Alexander-Universit€at Erlangen-Nurnberg€ (FAU), Erlangen, Germany; [email protected] 2Department of Ecology, Environment & Evolution, La Trobe University, Kingsbury Drive, Bundoora, Victoria 3086, Australia Typescript received 30 August 2018; accepted in revised form 3 December 2018 Abstract: Aguirrea fluegelii gen. et sp. nov. (Corallinales, within the family Corallinaceae and order Corallinales. Corallinophycidae, Rhodophyta) is described from the mid- Extant evolutionary history studies of Corallinophycidae Silurian of Gotland Island, Sweden (Hogklint€ Formation, involving molecular clocks now require updating using new lower Wenlock).
    [Show full text]
  • On the Fossil Alga Marinella Lugeoni PFENDER, 1939, Nom. Cons., and Its Seven Unfortunate Avatars. Revision of the Juliette PFENDER Collection
    Carnets Geol. 16 (7) On the fossil alga Marinella lugeoni PFENDER, 1939, nom. cons., and its seven unfortunate avatars Revision of the Juliette PFENDER Collection. Part 2. Revision of the Jesse Harlan JOHNSON Collection. Part 2 Bruno GRANIER 1 Dimas DIAS-BRITO 2 Abstract: A review of eight lookalike fossil species led to their being synonymized. Although Marinella lugeoni PFENDER, 1939, is not the senior synonym, it is proposed to ascribe it the status of a "nomen conservandum". The age of its type-locality in Spain is Late Jurassic, not Early Jurassic. We also docu- ment small Marinella lumps found in Albian-Cenomanian strata of Brazil. Key Words: Rhodogorgonales; Elianellaceae; Solenoporacea; Marinella. Citation: GRANIER B. & DIAS-BRITO D. (2016).- On the fossil alga Marinella lugeoni PFENDER, 1939, nom. cons., and its seven unfortunate avatars. Revision of the Juliette PFENDER Collection. Part 2. Revision of the Jesse Harlan JOHNSON Collection. Part 2.- Carnets Geol., Madrid, vol. 16, no. 7, p. 231-245. Résumé : À propos de l'algue fossile Marinella lugeoni PFENDER, 1939, nom. cons., et ses septs avatars malheureux. Révision de la Collection Juliette PFENDER. 2e partie. Révision de la Collection Jesse Harlan JOHNSON. 2e partie.- Le réexamen de huit espèces fossiles très semblables se conclut sur leur mise en synonymie. Bien que Marinella lugeoni PFENDER, 1939, ne soit pas le synonyme senior, nous proposons de lui attribuer le statut de "nomen conservandum". L'âge de sa localité-type en Espagne est Jurassique supérieur et non Jurassique inférieur. Enfin, nous consignons la découverte de petits nodules à Marinella dans des couches albo-cénomaniennes du Brésil.
    [Show full text]
  • Fengetal2010.Pdf
    J. Paleont., 84(4), 2010, pp. 569–587 Copyright ’ 2010, The Paleontological Society 0022-3360/10/0084-0569$03.00 MID-LATE DEVONIAN CALCIFIED MARINE ALGAE AND CYANOBACTERIA, SOUTH CHINA QI FENG,1 YI-MING GONG,1,2 AND ROBERT RIDING3 1Key Laboratory of Biogeology and Environmental Geology of Ministry of Education of China, and State Key Laboratory of Geological Processes and Mineral Resources, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, 430074, China, ,[email protected].; 2Key Laboratory of Biogenic Traces and Sedimentary Minerals of Henan Province, Henan Polytechnic University, Jiaozuo, Henan, 454003, China, ,[email protected].; and 3Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996-1410, USA, ,[email protected]. ABSTRACT—Givetian, Frasnian and Famennian limestones from southern China contain microfossils generally regarded as calcified algae and cyanobacteria. These are present in 61 out of 253 sampled horizons in four sections from three widely spaced localities in Guangxi and southern Guizhou. Three of the sections sampled are Givetian- Frasnian-Famennian; one section is Frasnian-Famennian. They include reef and non-reef carbonates of shallow marine platform facies. The following taxa are identified with differing degrees of confidence, and placed in algae, cyanobacteria or microproblematica. Algae: Halysis, ‘solenoporaceans’, Vermiporella. Cyanobacteria: Bevocastria, Girvanella, Hedstroemia, Subtifloria. Microproblematica: ?Chabakovia, Garwoodia,?Issinella, Izhella, Paraepiphyton, Rothpletzella, Shuguria,?Stenophycus, Tharama, Wetheredella. As a whole, the abundance of algae, cyanobacteria and microproblematica increases by 34% from Givetian to Frasnian, and declines by 63% in the Famennian. This secular pattern of marked Famennian decrease does not support recognition of them as ‘‘disaster forms’’ in the immediate aftermath of late Frasnian extinction.
    [Show full text]
  • An Urban Geologist's Guide to the Fossils of the Portland Stone
    Urban Geology in London No. 30 An Urban Geologist’s Guide to the Fossils of the Portland Stone The Portland seas were warm, full of nutrients and therefore full of life, and plenty of evidence for this can be seen on the walls of London’s buildings. Good reviews and discussion of the geology of the Portland Stone are to be found in the excellent web pages created by Ian West (West, 2013, 2014) and in Cope (2012). An excellent treatise on Portland Stone as a building material has recently been published by Hackman (2014). The unit of uppermost Jurassic age, the Tithonian which is known locally as the Portlandian (Cope, 2012). Therefore these rocks are ~ 150 million years old. Stratigraphically, the building stones form the upper part of the Portland Limestone Formation and are called the Freestone Member. Marine reptiles such as pliosaurs and ichthyosaurs would have swam these seas, though their remains are rarely encountered in the stone. Varieties of bivalves are most frequently observed, along with coquinas of marine snail (gastropod) shells. The waters were relatively shallow, but tidal, they were lagoon-type environments. This environment brings about the formation of particles of carbonate sand known as ooids or ooliths. Ooids are spheroidal grains which form around kernals of fine sand grains or shell fragments. In the warm, tropical lagoons, tidal currents roll the grains backwards and forwards, and therefore the carbonate is precipitated concentrically to form ooids. These have a maximum size of around 1 mm diameter, and are often visible with the aid of a hand lens, and sometimes the naked eye.
    [Show full text]
  • An Ancestral Tabulate Coral from the Ordos Basin, North China
    Zheng et al. Journal of Palaeogeography (2020) 9:26 https://doi.org/10.1186/s42501-020-00073-x Journal of Palaeogeography ORIGINAL ARTICLE Open Access Halysis Høeg, 1932 — an ancestral tabulate coral from the Ordos Basin, North China Li-Jing Zheng1,2,3, Hong-Xia Jiang4* , Ya-Sheng Wu1,2,5, Hong-Ping Bao6, Yue-Yang Zhang1,2,5, Jun-Feng Ren6 and Zheng-Liang Huang6 Abstract The problematic calcareous microfossil Halysis is abundant in the Middle Ordovician Darriwilian Stage of the western edge of the Ordos Basin, North China. The rich and well-preserved specimens of Halysis in this area facilitate detailed studies for its skeletal construction and tube microstructure. Halysis differs from calcified cyanobacteria and calcareous red and green algae in morphology, skeletal construction and microstructure, as well as reproduction mode. Halysis typically consists of multiple juxtaposed parallel tubes arranged in sheets (‘multiple- tube’ type) or is just composed of one tube (‘single-tube’ type). In ‘multiple-tube’ Halysis, tube fission by bifurcation results from the insertion of a microcrystalline wall at the center of a mother tube. This study demonstrates for the first time that the tube walls of Halysis have a laminofibrous (fibronormal) microstructure, composed of fibrous calcite perpendicular to wall surface, and recognizes the ‘single-tube’ type Halysis composed of one tube; in addition, for the first time, this study finds out that ‘multiple-tube’ Halysis develops buddings from the conjunction of two tubes and ‘single-tube’ Halysis shows wide-angle Y-shaped branchings. Based on these findings, this study further compares Halysis with tabulate corals.
    [Show full text]
  • Calcareous Algae
    54 Calcareous algae ROBERT RIDING Calcareous algae can be recognised in the field in Gotland as porcelaneous white nodules and masses of Solenopora and as laminated balls which have been termed Sphaerocodium and Spongiostroma. Solenopora is usually found in the reefal sediments but the balls form distinctive horizons in several parts of the sequence, notably the Tofta Beds and Eke Beds, and have commonly been mentioned in the descriptions and correlation of various stratigraphic units. Only Rothpletz (1908, 1913) has made a comprehensive study of the systema­ tics of these fossils but several subsequent workers (Hadding 1941, 1950, 1959, and others) have emphasized the sedimentological importance of calcareous algae in both reef and shallow-water, probably restricted, environments throughout the sequence. But many questions remain, especially concerning the volumetric importance and roles of algae in reefal deposits and their systematics. The material examined comprises 39 thin sections, 102 peels and some 50 hand specimens collected by Liljevall. It includes also thin sections from Vattenfallet of syntype and other material decribed by Rothpletz (1913). The information in the log (Fig. 20) on most algae is based on thin sections and peels made from the standard series of rock samples (the leve) of these samples is shown by black rectangles along the left column). The data on )arge algae , such as Solenopora , are mostly based on Liljevall's collection. Annotated floral list Solenopora gotlandica Rothpletz, S. campacta Billings The diagnosis of Solenopora relies primarily upon the poor or irregular de­ velopment of "tabula-like" cross-partitions in the vertical tubes in order to distinguish it from Pseudochaetes and Parachaetes.
    [Show full text]
  • Algal) Material in the Middle Devonian Rockport Quarry Limestone of the Northeastern Portion of Michegan's Lower Peninsula
    Western Michigan University ScholarWorks at WMU Master's Theses Graduate College 12-1981 The Paleoecology of Carbonaceous (Algal) Material in the Middle Devonian Rockport Quarry Limestone of the Northeastern Portion of Michegan's Lower Peninsula Jeffrey Dean Spruit Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/masters_theses Part of the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Commons Recommended Citation Spruit, Jeffrey Dean, "The Paleoecology of Carbonaceous (Algal) Material in the Middle Devonian Rockport Quarry Limestone of the Northeastern Portion of Michegan's Lower Peninsula" (1981). Master's Theses. 1820. https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/masters_theses/1820 This Masters Thesis-Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate College at ScholarWorks at WMU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Master's Theses by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at WMU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE PALEOECOLOGY OF CARBONACEOUS (ALGAL) MATERIAL IN THE MIDDLE DEVONIAN ROCKPORT QUARRY LIMESTONE OF THE NORTHEASTERN PORTION OF MICHEGAN'S LOWER PENINSULA Jeffrey Dean Spruit A Thesis Submitted, to the Faculty of the Graduate College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Science Department of Geology Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, Michigan December I98I Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. THE PALEOECOLOGY OF CARBONACEOUS (ALGAL) MATERIAL IN THE MIDDLE DEVONIAN ROCKPORT QUARRY LIMESTONE OF THE NORTHEASTERN PORTION OF MICHIGAN’S LOWER PENINSULA Jeffrey Dean Spruit, M.S. Western Michigan University, I98I The Rockport Quarry Limestone of the Lower Traverse Group represents a sequence of laterally contemporaneous carbonate platform sediments characterized in outcrop by four facies: (l) stromatoporoid biolithite, (2) organic-mud packstone, (3 ) biolithite-micrite transition, and (4) micrite.
    [Show full text]
  • A New Plate-Like Hypercalcified Chaetetid Demosponge (Loiscupula Bachendensi Gen
    Palaeontologia Electronica palaeo-electronica.org A new plate-like hypercalcified chaetetid demosponge (Loiscupula bachendensi gen. nov. sp. nov) from the Cantabrian Zone (Moscovian, Pennsylvanian, NW Spain) Diego Corrochano and Ronald R. West ABSTRACT A new hypercalcified chaetetid sponge, Loiscupula bachendensi gen. nov. sp. nov. (Demospongiae), has been recovered from the Bachende Formation (late Kashirian/early Myachkovian) in the Cantabrian Zone, NW Spain. Loiscupula has a cir- cular, concentric, platy basal skeleton, some with cylindrical features and chimneys, which sometimes branch on the upper surface. The basal skeleton is composed of polygonal (commonly hexagonal) to rounded tubules perpendicular to the surface of the skeleton producing the characteristic honeycomb pattern of chaetetids. Cathodolu- minescence microscopy revealed non-luminescent calcite pseudomorphs of monoaxon and polyaxon spicules, rarely styles, which are irregularly distributed although there are occurrences that suggest that a spicular network existed. The basal skeleton is composed of neomorphic low-Mg calcite (1.7 mol% MgCO3) and is strongly recrystallized; the tentative penicillate microstructure with relics of aragonite needles, and the high Sr content (up to 3456 ppm), suggest an original aragonite composition. Loiscupula is interpreted as primarily a gregarious organism with an inferred central point of attachment. This mode of growth produced small cryptic cavities between Lois- cupula and the substrate, which were inhabited by encrusting organisms, mostly fistuli- porid bryozoans. Based on the associated fossils and sedimentological features, it is suggested that Loiscupula inhabited an environment with a muddy bottom in the euphotic zone, where the water was well-oxygenated, of normal salinity, and the energy regime low to moderate.
    [Show full text]
  • Contemporary Taxonomic Perspectives of Fossil Coralline Red Algae: Their
    The Pa/aeobotanisr 59/20}0) .' }07-JJ9 003/-0/74/20/0 $100 Contemporary taxonomic perspectives offossil Coralline Red Algae: their possible origin and evolution AMIT K. GHOSH AND SUMANSARKAR Birbal Sahni Insti(ute ofPalaeobotany, 53 University Road, Lucknow 226007, India. (Received 0I July, 20 I0; revised version accepted 26 August, 20 I0) ABSTRACf Ghosh AK & Sarkar S 20 IO. Contemporary taxonomic perspectives offossil Coralline Red Algae: their possible origin and evolution. The Palaeobotanist 59(1-3) : 107-119. Studies done by various phycologists have brought about remarkable changes in the present-day coralline algal taxonomy. The taxonomy offossil coralline red algae also has been under the process of continuous revision and modification since 1993. Prior to 1993 it was believed that several diagnostic characters used in recent coralline red algae were unpreservable in fossil forms. Palaeoalgologists have now understood the value ofunification oftaxonomy, for extant and fossil corallines to accurately interpret the phylogeny, palaeoecology and palaeobiogeography. Phylogenetically, the corallines are very important as they represent a major evolutionary line within the red algae as evidenced by anatomical studies on recent forms as well as various studies on gene sequence analysis. The present contribution deals with the remarkable changes that have taken place since 1993 in the taxonomic aspects offossil coralline algae and the modern trends ofresearch in this context. Presently, an attempt has been made to establish the possible origin and evolution ofcoralline red algae. Key-words-Coralline Red Algae, Classification, Taxonomy, Possible Origin, Evolution. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ if ti'iCflI{ift'1 cllffCfl{OI: \RCflT B'-qq ~ ~ fctcf;m ~ cf;.
    [Show full text]
  • Biogeochemical and Redox Record of Mid–Late Triassic Reef Evolution in the Italian Dolomites
    Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 399 (2014) 52–66 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/palaeo Biogeochemical and redox record of mid–late Triassic reef evolution in the Italian Dolomites Fabio Tosti a,⁎, Adelaide Mastandrea b, Adriano Guido b, Fabio Demasi b,FrancoRussob, Robert Riding a a Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Tennessee, 1412 Circle Dr., Knoxville, TN 37996, USA b Dipartimento di Biologia, Ecologia e Scienze della Terra, Università della Calabria, 87036 Rende, Italy article info abstract Article history: Geochemical signatures and carbonate microfacies highlight contrasts between two distinctive mid–late Triassic Received 8 October 2013 reef communities in the Dolomite Alps, Italy. In the firstcommunity,sponges,bryozoans,calcified cyanobacteria Received in revised form 24 January 2014 and problematic organisms (Archaeolithoporella, Shamovella), together with a variety of micritic fabrics, formed Accepted 31 January 2014 compact reefs in high energy shallow-water at the margins of high-rise Ladinian–Carnian carbonate platforms. Available online 9 February 2014 Debris from these margins created steep foreslopes, and some large blocks of the allochthonous material – Keywords: (Wengen Cassian formations, Cipit Boulders) were buried in basinal shales that protected them from subsequent Biogeochemistry alteration and regional dolomitization. In the second and slightly younger community, small Carnian
    [Show full text]
  • CHOREONEMA (CORALLINALES, RHODOPHYTA): 18S Rdna
    J. Phycol. 39, 988–998 (2003) CHOREONEMA (CORALLINALES, RHODOPHYTA): 18S rDNA PHYLOGENY AND RESURRECTION OF THE HAPALIDIACEAE FOR THE SUBFAMILIES CHOREONEMATOIDEAE, AUSTROLITHOIDEAE, AND MELOBESIOIDEAE 1 Adele S. Harvey Department of Botany, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia 3086 Sharon T. Broadwater 2 Department of Biology, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia 23187, USA William J. Woelkerling and Paul J. Mitrovski Department of Botany, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Victoria, Australia 3086 Phylogenetic analyses of 18S rDNA gene data for Abbreviations: ML, maximum likelihood; MP, maxi- Choreonema thuretii (Corallinales, Rhodophyta) and mum parsimony available data for other coralline red algae indicated that Choreonema belongs to the same lineage as other taxa of Corallinales possessing tetra/bisporangial con- This article deals with the 18S rDNA (small subunit ceptacles with multiporate plates. These results, when rDNA) phylogeny of Choreonema thuretii and the place- integrated with extant morphological/anatomical data, ment of Choreonema and subfamilies Choreonematoideae, ultrastructural data, and taxonomic data led to the con- Melobesioideae, and Austrolithoideae in a separate family clusion that all taxa of Corallinales possessing multipo- of Corallinales (Rhodophyta), the earliest available name rate conceptacles belong to a distinct family, the Hapa- for which is Hapalidiaceae (Gray 1864, p. 22). The rec- lidiaceae. Recognition of the Hapalidiaceae as a distinct ognition of the Hapalidiaceae as
    [Show full text]