Gothograptus domeyki, Kozłowska & Bates & Zalasiewicz & Radzevičius, 2019

Kozłowska, Anna, Bates, Denis, Zalasiewicz, Jan & Radzevičius, Sigitas, 2019, Evolutionary significance of the retiolitine Gothograptus (Graptolithina) with four new species from the Silurian of the East European Platform (Baltica), Poland and Lithuania, Zootaxa 4568 (3), pp. 435-469 : 454-457

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4568.3.2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8FD0AC89-424E-4CAC-92A5-A5600A481140

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5935882

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A687FC-FFF9-985B-8FA2-D165FCA7FE0C

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gothograptus domeyki
status

sp. nov.

Gothograptus domeyki n. sp.

Figs 15–16 View FIGURE 15 View FIGURE 16

?1952 Gothograptus nassa, Bouček & Münch , pp. 11–15, fig. 2, a–i.

Type material. Holotype number VU RET-13, mature specimen with seven pairs of thecae and appendix ( Fig. 16 View FIGURE 16 A–B), Šiupyliai-69 core, 1009,1 m, lundgreni Biozone, paratype number VU RET-14, finite tubarium ( Fig. 16 View FIGURE 16 C–E), Šiupyliai-69 core, depth 1010.0 m, lundgreni Biozone , Lithuania.

Etymology. Ignacy Domeyko (1802–1889) was a Polish geologist, mineralogist and educator; most of his life was spent in Chile.

Diagnosis. Gothograptus with genicular hoods of nassa type developed on the first pair of thecae; second pair of thecae may have paired spines with seams or remnants of reticulum between them; subsequent thecae lacking genicular processes except for the last theca with a reticulated hood. Distinctively thicker thecal lips than pleural and genicular lists. G othograptus domeyki differs from other Gothograptus species in the lack of genicular structures in the medial and distal thecae.

Remarks. Gothograptus domeyki n. sp. differs from other Gothograptus species in the lack of any genicular processes in most thecae as well as in having thick lips. G. domeyki n. sp. is similar to G. kozlowskii in having nassa type hoods on the first pair of thecae and reticulated hoods on the last pair of thecae. Similar reticulated hoods on the last thecae are also found in G. storchi . G. domeyki n. sp. is so far known only from Lithuania.

Bouček & Münch (1952) described some retiolitines as Gothograptus nassa , from the Czech Republic, lundgreni Biozone. Their drawings show some tubaria with thick lips, and without genicular nassa hoods, similar to those described herein for the first time in G. domeyki n. sp. Proper recognition of this form needs some detailed study.

Material. Two cores from Lithuania: Šiupyliai-69 core, depths: 1009.7 m 30 young, 12 mature; 1009.1 m 50 young, 31 mature; Vilkaviškis-131 core, depth 1095.8 m four fragments of mature specimens. Upper part of lundgreni Biozone.

Description. Mature tubaria usually have seven or eight pairs of thecae and appendix. The total length of the tubarium is about 7.0 mm, together with the appendix. The tubarium is almost parallel-sided, widest at 0.83 mm at the level of the first thecal pair, and then it slowly narrows to 0.4 mm just below the appendix.

In some mature specimens the prongs of the ancora, as well as the sicular rim and lists above the proximal lateral orifices, are extremely thick (( Fig. 16A, B, E, H, I View FIGURE 16 ). An outer ancora is well developed in mature specimens. The proximal ventral orifices are overgrown by reticulum in mature colonies. Mid-ventral lists are 0.5 mm long in the first and last thecae, the rest are about 0.7 mm long.

Genicular structures start to develop when the colony reaches about five thecal pairs. There are three types of genicular structures in mature tubaria of G. domeyki n. sp. The first pair of thecae have nassa hoods; usually they are small and do not cover the orifices of thecae or they are slightly larger than the thecal orifice.

The second and third thecal pairs have a pair of curved spines grown on the pleural lists, extending horizontally. Seams on the inner sides of the spines indicate that there was a thin membrane between them, so that the spines form the sides of a hood. The bases of the spines in the mature tubaria are of triangular shape ( Fig. 16G View FIGURE 16 ). Similar spines forming hoods are also found in Gothograptus kozlowskii (see below).

The next thecae have no hoods; their lips are thick, about twice as thick as the geniculum list. The genicular lists became significantly thinner in the last thecae. The last pair of thecae have reticulated hoods covering orifices; the genicular list is not developed. The reticulum of these hoods is connected with the appendix ( Fig. 16A View FIGURE 16 ).

umbrella, outside view.

Some young tubaria with five pairs of thecae have reticulum up to the third pair of thecae, small nassa hoods on the first thecae, the two next pairs of thecae having thin genicular spines. A specimen with seven pairs of thecae has a well-developed reticulum, except on the two last thecae. The lists of young colonies are thin; the thickest is the nema ( Fig. 15A, D View FIGURE 15 ). During astogeny the next thicker lists are the lateral apertural rods.

The lips and genicular lists are so thick that the thecal orifice is very narrow ( Fig. 15E View FIGURE 15 , 16E View FIGURE 16 ). The thecal orifices vary in shape from nearly rectangular to pyramidal with rounded corners ( Fig. 7A View FIGURE 7 , 16C, E View FIGURE 16 ). Mature colonies have a dense reticulum of similar thickness to the clathrial lists, thus the structures formed by clathrial lists are difficult to distinguish.

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