Pectinida, Gray, 1854

Hryniewicz, Krzysztof, Little, Crispin T. S. & Nakrem, Hans Arne, 2014, Bivalves from the latest Jurassic-earliest Cretaceous hydrocarbon seep carbonates from central Spitsbergen, Svalbard, Zootaxa 3859 (1), pp. 1-66 : 22

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3859.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:24FCAAE1-AB7C-4FAD-8698-D0C9F12400EC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4929779

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A2311D4D-9F0C-E330-04E6-FC8BFE9E2F60

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Pectinida
status

 

Pectinida View in CoL gen. et sp. indet.

( Figure 10 A–B View FIGURE 10 )

2011 Ostreoidean—Hammer et al., tab. 2.

Material examined. Five specimens; fragmented and delaminated shells. See Appendix 1 for the list of specimens.

Description. Shell thin, roughly round in shape, only weakly inflated. Right valve thin, flat, visible only in cross-section. Left valve thin, weakly convex and larger than right valve; irregularly shaped, no sign of attachment found. Beak weakly incurved, accompanied by a shallow ventrally directed furrow. Weak muscle scar probably represent an adductor muscle scar. Shell ornamented by weak commarginal folds.

Remarks. The lack of a well demarcated external ligament, the thinness of the shells and the nature of cementation precludes our specimens belonging to the Ostreida Férrusac, 1822 . Instead, the flat right valve facing the substrate and a larger covering left valve indicates that our specimens belong either to the Anomiidae Rafinesque, 1815 , or the Dimyidae, Fischer, 1886 (e.g. Coan et al. 2000; Coan & Scott 2012). An anomiid origin is probably more likely because the dorsal furrow resembles the shell fusion scar characteristic for anomiids ( Yonge 1977). However, the lack of well preserved right valves and adductor muscle scars means we cannot unequivocally include our specimens into either the Anomiidae and Dimyidae at present.

Palaeoecology. Our species was most likely a filter-feeder attached to hard substrates. Modern anomiids are shallow water forms, attached by a byssus protruding through a foramen in the lower valve (e.g. Yonge 1977). Recent Dimyidae is a cementing group found in deep water and cryptic habitats (e.g. Waller 2012). In the Mesozoic both groups were fairly common in shallow water habitats (e.g. Fürsich & Werner 1989; Hodges 1991; Todd & Palmer 2002).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Bivalvia

Order

Pectinida

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF