ORTHOCARDIINAE, Schneider, 2002

Schneider, Jay A., 2002, Phylogeny of cardiid bivalves (cockles and giant clams): revision of the Cardiinae and the importance of fossils in explaining disjunct biogeographical distributions, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 136 (3), pp. 321-369 : 352-359

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1046/j.1096-3642.2002.00030.x

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/7F486968-FFD0-FFA8-FEA1-F5E5FC40C16A

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

ORTHOCARDIINAE
status

subfam. nov.

ORTHOCARDIINAE View in CoL

Orthocardiinae seems to be home to a disproportionate number of little studied and poorly understood generic-level taxa. Previous studies have tried to ally individual orthocardiine generic-level taxa with Acanthocardia , Bucardium , Vepricardium , and even Fraginae or the laevicardiine Nemocardium . It has not previously been considered that these taxa may together form a monophyletic group distinct from previously recognized subfamilies.

Europicardium View in CoL was erected as a subgenus of Bucardium View in CoL by Popov (1977) for several species of Oligocene to Pliocene cardiids from Europe and North Africa (see Schneider, 1998a; for the problems regarding the alleged Eocene Europicardium View in CoL ). Keen (1980) classified Europicardium View in CoL as a subgenus of Acanthocardia View in CoL . These species had usually been classified as Trachycardium (see synonomy list in Ben Moussa, 1994); Ben Moussa (1994), Kókay (1985, 1996) and Monegatti & Raffi, 2001) still persisted in assigning species of Europicardium View in CoL to Trachycardium, and erroneously argued that Trachycardium was once a component of Cenozoic to Recent faunas of Europe and the eastern Atlantic.

All of the most parsimonious trees from the present analysis indicate that Europicardium View in CoL and Loxocardium View in CoL are sister taxa, in a different clade ( Orthocardiinae View in CoL ) than Bucardium View in CoL and Acanthocardia (Cardiinae) View in CoL . Juvenile specimens of Europicardium View in CoL have nearly the exact shell shape of adult Loxocardium View in CoL ( Fig. 23 View Figure 23 ). It is therefore suggested that Europicardium View in CoL evolved via peramorphosis from some species of Loxocardium View in CoL ( Loxocardium View in CoL thus being paraphyletic), or from a common ancestor of the two taxa, for the adult morphology of Europicardium View in CoL has developed beyond that of its ancestor ( McNamara, 1986). Popov (1977) thought that Europicardium View in CoL was extinct, but Cardium caparti Nickles, 1955 View in CoL from west Africa has been placed in Europicardium View in CoL by von Cosel (pers. comm. in Vidal, 1999). Von Cosel (pers. comm. in Vidal, 1999) also places another west African species, Cardium serrulatum Deshayes, 1855 View in CoL , in Europicardium View in CoL , but this species is herein considered a Trachycardium (Schneider, unpubl.). T. serrulata , from the Pleistocene and Recent of west Africa, is the only species of Trachycardium, fossil or Recent, from the eastern Atlantic (Schneider, unpubl.). Popov (1977) classified the Pleistocene to Recent Cardium sueziense Issel, 1869 View in CoL as the sole living species of Loxocardium View in CoL . Investigation of the shell and anatomy of this species (Schneider, unpubl.) indicates that C. sueziense View in CoL is a species of the fragine Microfragum View in CoL . There are no known living species of Loxocardium View in CoL . A list of all valid Recent and fossil species of Europicardium View in CoL may be found in Table 6.

Marwick (1944) erected the genus Hedecardium for several Eocene to Miocene cardiids from New Zealand and Australia. Just as numerous workers had used Trachycardium as a default taxon for the medium to large, heavily ornamented species that Popov (1977) would eventually place in Europicardium , many of the species that Marwick (1944) placed in Hedecardium had been classified as Trachycardium ( Suter, 1907, 1915; Powell & Bartrum, 1929; Laws, 1933) because of their medium to large size and prominent radial ribs.

Marwick (1944) first suggested that Hedecardium was allied with Vepricardium , but later ( Marwick, 1960) suggested that Hedecardium may be related to Nemocardium (Pratulum) . Beu & Maxwell (1990) adopted Marwick’s (1960) latter view, for both Nemocardium and Hedecardium have well-defined posterior slopes. As Marwick (1944), Maxwell (1978) and Beu & Maxwell (1990) indicated, the posterior ribs on Hedecardium are lower and more rounded than those on the rest of the shell. However, this ribbing pattern is the opposite of that seen on Nemocardium . On Nemocardium , the posterior ribs are more prominent than the ribs on the rest of the shell ( Dall, 1900; Keen, 1969a, 1980; Kafanov & Popov, 1977; Schneider, 1995; numerous others), although on some subgenera (including Pratulum) the anterior and central ribs increase in strength during ontogeny to be equal (or nearly so) in strength to the posterior ribs. On Hedecardium , the posterior ribs decrease in strength during ontogeny ( Figs 10A View Figure 10 , 26 View Figure 26 ). A decrease in strength of posterior ribs, coupled with a differentiation of the posterior slope of the shell, occurs independently in the cardiine Dinocardium , the laevicardiine Laevicardium & Clinocardiinae . Keen (1951, 1969a, 1980) considered Dinocardium , Laevicardium , Cerastoderma – now known to be the most basal lymnocardiine – ( Popov, 1977; Kafanov & Popov, 1977; Schneider, 1998b; numerous others) and the taxa now in Clinocardiinae to be a monophyletic group based primarily on the character of weakened posterior ribs. It has been shown that these taxa have evolved this condition independently ( Kafanov, 1974, 1980; Kafanov & Popov, 1977; Schneider, 1992).

An examination of Hedecardium (Iheringicardium) sheds further light on the relationship of Hedecardium s.l. to Orthocardiinae as opposed to Nemocardium . As is typical for eucardiids, H. (Iheringicardium) ameghinoi has spines along the tops of ribs all across the exterior of the shell, not just on the posterior, as on Hedecardium s.s. (see Figs 10A View Figure 10 , 26 View Figure 26 , 27 View Figure 27 ). The only species of Nemocardium which have spines on the central and anterior slopes belong to the tiny, highly ornamented Neogene taxa Nemocardium (Trifaricardium) and N. ( Frigidocardium ); the closely related N. ( Microcardium ) has spines on the central slope ( Keen, 1969a, 1980; Wilson & Stevenson, 1977; Poutiers, 1992; Schneider, 1995). However, N. (Pratulum), from which Marwick (1960) and Beu & Maxwell (1990) derive Hedecardium s.l., has spines on the posterior slope only. Furthermore, some or all taxa of Hedecardium s.l. display eucardiid features unknown in Nemocardium : (1) all three subgenera of Hedecardium have cross-striae (2) primary radial threads are present on H. s.s and H. (Iheringicardium) ( Figs 26 View Figure 26 , 27 View Figure 27 ) and (3) secondary radial threads are present on H. (I) patagonicum ( Ihering, 1907) ( Fig. 27 View Figure 27 ). Finally, as on virtually all Cenozoic eucardiids, the ribs on Hedecardium – especially the most basal taxon H. (Iheringicardium) – are very wide, usually wider than high ( Figs 10 View Figure 10 , 26 View Figure 26 and 27 View Figure 27 ). However, the ribs of virtually all species of Nemocardium are very narrow, usually no wider than they are high ( Schneider, 1995, 1998a).

The increase in rib width on Cenozoic eucardiids relative to Cretaceous eucardiids (such as Granocardium ) and noneucardiids (such as Nemocardium ) has been shown to be the result of fusion of two adjacent ribs to form a single rib ( Schneider, 1998a). A radial rib on a Cenozoic eucardiid is therefore homologous to two radial ribs plus the intervening interspace on Granocardium or Nemocardium . The two sides of a rib on a Cenozoic eucardiid are each homologous to a single rib on Granocardium or Nemocardium , and the rib top on a Cenozoic eucardiid is homologous to the intervening interspace on Granocardium or Nemocardium .

Hedecardium (Iheringicardium) exhibits a further doubled rib. Scale in cm indicated on figure.

case of fusion of radial ribs. Fusion of pairs of radial ribs on the posterior slope of H. (I) philippii ( Ihering, 1897) has been described and figured by Ihering (1897: 249–250, pl. 6, fig. 40); an example of doubled ribs on this species is illustrated herein ( Fig. 26B View Figure 26 ). Ortmann (1902) noted the same phenomenon. Ihering also described and figured fusion of radial rib pairs all along the exterior of H. (I) ameghinoi ( Ihering, 1907, p. 292, pl. 11, fig. 72a; see Fig. 27C, D View Figure 27 , herein). Fusion of radial ribs also occurs on H. (I) patagonicum (pers. obs.). These doubled ribs clearly bear two rows of spines along the top of the rib. Each one of these doubled ribs on H. (Iheringicardium) therefore would be homologous to four radial ribs and three intervening interspaces on Granocardium or Nemocardium .

Hedecardium (Iheringicardium) is a South American endemic whose closest relatives ( Hedecardium View in CoL s.s and H. [Titanocardium]) are known mostly from New Zealand ( Table 7). Marwick (1944), when erecting Hedecardium View in CoL , suggested that the Australian species Cardium pseudomagnum McCoy, 1877 View in CoL belonged to Hedecardium View in CoL . Keen, who classified Hedecardium View in CoL as a subgenus of Vepricardium View in CoL , gave the biogeographical range of Hedecardium View in CoL to be New Zealand, Australia and Burma ( Keen, 1969a) and later ( Keen, 1980) as South Pacific and South Asia. A thorough search of Keen’s unpublished notes in the NMNH yielded no species ever reported from Burma which she assigned to Hedecardium View in CoL . The most likely source of Keen’s record of a Burmese Hedecardium View in CoL is Cardium kanleanum Cotter, 1923 , which she called ‘ Vepricardium View in CoL ??’ in her notes; I assign this species to Hedecardium View in CoL s.s. ( Table 7) on the basis of its shell shape, slight umbonal ridge, and numerous (48–50) unornamented or weakly ornamented radial ribs. Darragh (1970) assigned C. moniletectum Tate, 1887 View in CoL and C. septuagenarium Tate, 1887 View in CoL to Hedecardium View in CoL (but assigned C. pseudomagnum View in CoL to Trachycardium); C. septuagenarium View in CoL is herein considered a junior synonym of C. moniletectum View in CoL . Most recently, Maxwell (1978; Beu & Maxwell, 1990) considered Hedecardium View in CoL to be endemic to New Zealand.

It was von Ihering (1891) himself who noted the similarity between the faunas of New Zealand and South America, before he began working on South American Cenozoic molluscs. According to Ihering (1907), only six of the 282 molluscan species from the ‘Formation Pan-Patagonienne’ of Argentina (roughly equivalent to the Oligocene; see Olivera, Zinsmeister & Parma, 1994; references therein) were also recorded from New Zealand. It is uncertain whether Ihering ever associated the South American species herein placed in H. (Iheringicardium) with those now placed in either of the predominantly New Zealand taxa Hedecardium View in CoL s.s. or H. (Titanocardium). However, the New Zealand geologist F. W. Hutton may have recognized some connection between the Tertiary cardiids of New Zealand and South America, for while discussing Cardium philippii Ihering, 1897 (a species now placed in H. [Iheringicardium]; Table 7), Ihering (1907) compared it with a New Zealand form sent to him by Hutton, which Hutton had identified (in writing to Ihering) as Cardium multistriatum Sowerby, 1833 View in CoL . C. multistriatum View in CoL is a name with a tortuous taxonomic history (see Fischer-Piette, 1977). Originally described from Recent shells from the Pacific coast of South America, Sowerby (1846) subsequently reported C. multistriatum View in CoL from Tertiary material collected by Charles Darwin in Patagonia. Sowerby’s figure (Pl. II, fig. 16) is indeterminable. Ihering (1907: 291) said the New Zealand form was very different (“bien different[e]”) from both C. philippii and C. multistriatum View in CoL and gave it the new name C. huttoni ; Powell & Bartrum (1929) would eventually synonomize C. huttoni with Cardium greyi Hutton, 1873 View in CoL , which was placed in H. (Titanocardium) by Maxwell (1978). In short, there may have been even more evidence for a South America-New Zealand biogeographical connection than von Ihering (1891) thought, and the material was literally in his hands. None of the publications by Marwick, Beu or Maxwell concerning Hedecardium View in CoL posit any relations with South American taxa.

Comparatively little attention has been paid to South American Oligocene and Lower Miocene molluscan faunas since Ihering (1907); the only references I know of to any of the cardiids herein assigned to H. (Iheringicardium) since Ihering (1907) have been compendia ( Ihering, 1914; Parodiz, 1996). It is predicted that a renewed study of the morphology and systematics of Oligocene and Miocene South American molluscs will demonstrate that the biogeographical relations between South America and New Zealand are stronger than currently thought, and that many taxa which have long been considered to be endemic to New Zealand actually may have representatives in South America.

The phylogenetic relationships of Agnocardia , Afrocardium and the species herein assigned to the new genus Freneixicardia likewise have been poorly understood. Stewart (1930) erected Agnocardia as a subgenus of Trachycardium. The species that Stewart assigned to Agnocardia had previously been placed in Trachycardium ( Conrad, 1865; Aldrich, 1911) or Acanthocardia ( Woodring, 1925; Gardner, 1926), primarily on the basis of the prominent spines. Keen (1951, 1969a, 1980) considered Agnocardia a subgenus of Acanthocardia . Popov (1977) classified Agnocardia as a subgenus of Bucardium . Agnocardia was raised to a genus by Vokes (1977; also see Vokes, 1984, 1989) and followed by Dockery (1982) and Schneider (1998a). Afrocardium was erected as a subgenus of Fragum by le Tomlin (1931). Keen (1951, 1969a, 1980) classified Afrocardium as a subgenus of the fragine Ctenocardia on the basis of Afrocardium ’s heavy tubular spines. Popov (1977) synonymized Afrocardium with Plagiocardium ; Kafanov and Popov (1977) placed Afrocardium in the subfamily Fraginae , tribe Parvicardiini , along with Parvicardium , Papillicardium (fragines; Schneider, 1998b), Plagiocardium , Maoricardium (basal members of the CFTL lineage, Schneider, 1998b), and Loxocardium (orthocardiine, herein). Kafanov & Popov (1977) also tentatively included in their new tribe Parvicardiini the Sarmatian (late Middle Miocene) brackish-water cardiids Inaequicostata , Kubanocardium and Obsoletiforma , which have more recently been considered lymnocardiines ( Nevesskaia et al., 1993; Paramonova, 1994). Cardium verrucosum and C. hausmanni , the species herein assigned to the new genus Freneixicardia , have previously been placed in Vepricardium ( Sacco, 1899; Cossmann, 1905; Glibert & Poel, 1970; Glibert, 1980; numerous others); however, Strougo (1976) and Popov (1977) did place C. verrucosum in Agnocardia .

As stated in Results, Agnocardia , Afrocardium and Freneixicardia share two synapomorphies with the other Orthocardiinae : spines entirely microstructurally discontinuous with the outer shell layer and a fully reflected maximum ventral shell margin. None of these three taxa has a crenulate posterior margin, the synapomorphy of Cardiinae s.s. Alternate tree topologies positing Agnocardia as a member of the Cardiinae s.s. add between five and 14 steps to the shortest trees. It is more parsimonious to consider Agnocardia a member of Orthocardiinae than Cardiinae . One of the three characters uniting Agnocardia and Afrocardium , concave ribs, is otherwise only known in Orthocardium and polymorphically in Hedecardium s.s. Positing Orthocardium as the sister taxon to Agnocardia + Afrocardium adds one step to the shortest trees. Positing Orthocardium as the sister taxon to Freneixicardia + ( Agnocardia + Afrocardium ), and thus reversal to convex or flat ribs in Freneixicardia , does not add any steps to the shortest trees.

Afrocardium View in CoL is a member of the Orthocardiinae View in CoL clearly closely related to Agnocardia View in CoL (united by three characters in 92% of the shortest trees; see Results). Afrocardium View in CoL does not possess any of the derived characters of Fraginae View in CoL , including loss of the perisiphonal suture (see Schneider, 1998b). There may be several reasons that a sister taxon relationship between Agnocardia View in CoL and Afrocardium View in CoL has never been posited. Both are poorly known taxa, represented by relatively few species, all of which are rare and often misidentified both in museum collections and in the literature. For instance, although Agnocardia View in CoL had been reported from numerous localities in tropical America ( Vokes, 1984; Table 8), it was conspicuously unknown from Panama because all of the Agnocardia View in CoL specimens examined by Woodring (1982) were misidentified as Trachycardium sp. Agnocardia View in CoL has been reported almost exclusively from Old World fossils (in fact, Vokes, 1984; rejects all but one record of Old World Agnocardia View in CoL ; Table 8) whereas Afrocardium View in CoL is known mostly from Recent species from the relatively poorly studied Indian Ocean ( Table 3). Agnocardia View in CoL has been studied almost exclusively by palaeontologists concerned with tropical American Palaeogene and Neogene biostratigraphy; Afrocardium View in CoL by zoologists studying living Indo-Pacific faunas. It is highly probable that the palaeontologists studying Agnocardia View in CoL never examined any species of Afrocardium View in CoL , for Afrocardium View in CoL was a tiny fragine from the Indian Ocean; likewise, the zoologists studying Afrocardium View in CoL would not have examined any specimens of Agnocardia View in CoL , because Agnocardia View in CoL was a large extinct cardiine from the Americas. In both cases, these heavily ornamented cardiids were simply allied with whatever other heavily ornamented cardiids were already well-known from the region: Agnocardia View in CoL was allied with the tropical American Trachycardium (or occasionally Acanthocardia, Miocene View in CoL to Recent of Europe and known from the Miocene of Florida since Dall, 1900), whereas Afrocardium View in CoL was allied with the Indo-Pacific fragines Fragum View in CoL and Ctenocardia View in CoL . Additionally, Trachycardium has long been a polyphyletic default taxon for large, heavily ornamented cardiids (see Discussions of Europicardium View in CoL and Hedecardium View in CoL , above), while Fragum View in CoL has similarly been a polyphyletic default taxon for small, heavily ornamented and trigonally shaped cardiids (see Schneider, 1998a).

The biogeography of the sister taxa Agnocardia View in CoL and Afrocardium View in CoL is most unusual, with one taxon known mostly from the tropical Americas and the other mostly known from the Indian Ocean. This disjunct distribution originally led me to consider that Afrocardium View in CoL had arrived in the Indian Ocean (by either dispersal or vicariance) without leaving a fossil record in Africa, hardly implausible given that Afrocardium View in CoL is small and rare, and that Neogene marine fossiliferous strata in Africa are uncommon and understudied. Afrocardium View in CoL would then be some sort of living fossil, a taxon with American affinities finding refuge in the Indian Ocean. Given that the systematics of the benthic marine invertebrate fauna of the Indian Ocean has been little studied since the early twentieth century, when usually taxonomic categories were much broader (eight of the nine Recent species of Afrocardium View in CoL were originally classified simply as Cardium View in CoL and le Tomlin, [1931] was the last person to pay virtually any attention to these species since Sowerby [1914]), perhaps modern systematic revisions of the marine invertebrates of the Indian Ocean would prove this region to be a biogeographical refuge in the sense that deeper waters and high latitudes are refugia ( Vermeij, 1987; Bottjer & Jablonski, 1988; Schneider & Marincovich, 2000).

However, I have identified three species of Afrocardium which may eliminate this biogeographical and stratigraphic conundrum: (1) Laevicardium (Plagiocardium) infinum Glibert, 1936 , from the Lower Bartonian (Middle Eocene) Sables de Wemmel of Belgium (2) Cardium defrancii Deshayes, 1858 from the Lower Oligocene of France, and (3) Cardium hirsutum Bronn, 1831 , from the Miocene of France, Austria, Hungary and Ukraine, Miocene and Pliocene of Italy, and Pliocene of Algeria ( Table 3) ( Monegatti & Raffi [2001] report Pleistocene Parvicardium hirsutum in a faunal list). Although the details of the phylogenetic relationships and biogeographical patterns amongst all the living and extinct species of Agnocardia and Afrocardium must await a species-level analysis, it appears that Agnocardia + Afrocardium is a tropical Tethyan clade which happened to become best known from its representatives in the Eocene to Pliocene of tropical America and the Recent of the Indian Ocean. Apparently, Afrocardium entered what is now the Indian Ocean when it was part of the Tethys seaway, and did not disperse from the western Atlantic. Until their species-level relationships are better resolved, Agnocardia and Afrocardium should be considered separate genera.

These three extinct species of Afrocardium had been identified by European palaeontologists as Plagiocardium or occasionally Parvicardium ( Sacco, 1899; Dautzenberg in Cerulli-Irelli, 1908; Lamothe, 1908; Dollfuss & Dautzenberg, 1913; Glibert, 1936; Glibert & van de Poel, 1970; Popov, 1977; Nevesskaia et al., 1993; Monegatti & Raffi, 2001). Just as species of Agnocardia were often identified as Trachycardium, and Afrocardium was classified as a subgenus of Fragum or Ctenocardia , European palaeontologists may simply have classified Laevicardium (Plagiocardium) infinum , Cardium hirsutum and C. defrancii as species of Plagiocardium because Plagiocardium was a small, heavily ornamented cardiid already known from the Palaeocene through Miocene of Europe.

An additional fossil species of Afrocardium is Cardium (Trachycardium) infantule Nomura & Zinbo, 1934 , from the Pleistocene of the Ryukyu Islands. The shell shape of this species is round, unlike Fraginae (and all Recent species of Afrocardium except for A. exochum ) and not dissimilar to Trachycardium (and Agnocardia , species of which are often classified as Trachycardium). Nomura & Zinbo (1934) therefore thought they were dealing with a species of Trachycardium; its small size was attributed to the specimens representing juveniles, hence the specific epithet infantule .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Bivalvia

Order

Cardiida

Family

Cardiidae

Loc

ORTHOCARDIINAE

Schneider, Jay A. 2002
2002
Loc

Orthocardiinae

Schneider 2002
2002
Loc

Hedecardium (Iheringicardium)

Schneider 2002
2002
Loc

Orthocardiinae

Schneider 2002
2002
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Europicardium

Popov 1977
1977
Loc

Cardium caparti

Nickles 1955
1955
Loc

Microfragum

Habe 1951
1951
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Afrocardium

Tomlin 1931
1931
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Fraginae

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Agnocardia

Stewart 1930
1930
Loc

Vepricardium

Iredale 1929
1929
Loc

Vepricardium

Iredale 1929
1929
Loc

Cardium kanleanum

Cotter 1923
1923
Loc

C. huttoni

Ihering 1907
1907
Loc

C. huttoni

Ihering 1907
1907
Loc

Cardium philippii

Ihering 1897
1897
Loc

C. philippii

Ihering 1897
1897
Loc

C. moniletectum

Tate 1887
1887
Loc

C. septuagenarium

Tate 1887
1887
Loc

C. septuagenarium

Tate 1887
1887
Loc

C. moniletectum

Tate 1887
1887
Loc

Loxocardium

Cossmann 1886
1886
Loc

Loxocardium

Cossmann 1886
1886
Loc

Loxocardium

Cossmann 1886
1886
Loc

Loxocardium

Cossmann 1886
1886
Loc

Loxocardium

Cossmann 1886
1886
Loc

Loxocardium

Cossmann 1886
1886
Loc

Cardium pseudomagnum

McCoy 1877
1877
Loc

C. pseudomagnum

McCoy 1877
1877
Loc

Cardium greyi

Hutton 1873
1873
Loc

Cardium sueziense

Issel 1869
1869
Loc

C. sueziense

Issel 1869
1869
Loc

Ctenocardia

H. Adams & A. Adams 1857
1857
Loc

Cardium serrulatum

Deshayes 1855
1855
Loc

Cardium multistriatum

Sowerby 1833
1833
Loc

C. multistriatum

Sowerby 1833
1833
Loc

C. multistriatum

Sowerby 1833
1833
Loc

C. multistriatum

Sowerby 1833
1833
Loc

Fragum

Roding 1798
1798
Loc

Fragum

Roding 1798
1798
Loc

Cardium

Linnaeus 1758
1758
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