Beauvoisina carinata, Kiel & Campbell & Gaillard, 2010

Kiel, Steffen, Campbell, Kathleen A. & Gaillard, Christian, 2010, New and little known mollusks from ancient chemosynthetic environments, Zootaxa 2390 (1), pp. 26-48 : 41-42

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.2390.1.2

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5312902

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/C86DD84B-FFE8-FFA1-FF79-CE80DCA4FD38

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Beauvoisina carinata
status

sp. nov.

Beauvoisina carinata sp. nov.

( Fig 10 View FIGURE 10 )

1985 large bivalves, Gaillard et al., pl. 1, fig. 7.

1990 Lucinacea , Rolin et al., figs. 5, 6.

1992 Lucinid bivalve, Gaillard et al., fig. 7a.

Diagnosis: As for the genus.

Holotype: FSL 286 459, L = 42 mm, H = 34 mm, W = 22 mm; illustrated on Figs. 10A, J View FIGURE 10 .

Paratypes: The figured specimens FSL 286 460 – 286 463.

Type locality: Seep deposits at Beauvoisin, Drôme, France, 44°18’N, 5°12’E; Late Jurassic, Oxfordian GoogleMaps .

Material: The type material and numerous additional specimens from the late Jurassic seep carbonates at Beauvoisin, southeastern France, deposited in the FSL .

Etymology: For its carinate lunule.

Remarks: Beauvoisina carinata is the earliest record of a lucinid from a methane seep. Shells larger than ca. 50 mm are usually crushed. The adductor muscle scars are extremely weak: although several wellpreserved internal molds were available, neither the scars nor the pallial line could be detected (see figs. 10H, I, K, L). In this respect this species resembles a similarly shaped lucinid from the Early Cretaceous (Hauterivian) Crimean methane seep site, which also has very weak muscle attachment scars ( Kiel and Peckmann 2008). The Crimean species differs by lacking the elongate nymph of the Beauvoisin species. The hinge of Beauvoisina carinata differs from that of the Late Cretaceous North American Nymphalucina occidentalis Morton, 1842 by its much narrower nymph; further, N. occidentalis has a small cardinal tooth pointing posteriorly, that is lacking in Beauvoisina carinata ( Speden 1970) . The large, mid-Cretaceous lucinid Ezolucina inflata ( Kanie and Nishida, 2000) has a much higher umbo than B. carinata and a more angular shape, resembling that of vesicomyids rather than oval shape of B. carinata (see Amano et al. 2008). Another large, seep-related lucinid with late Mesozoic members is Nipponothracia , which differs from B. carinata by its edentulous hinge (Kanie and Sakai 1997; Kiel et al. 2008). Along with the tall gastropod that we describe as Humptulipsia macsotayi herein, Thieuloy (1972) reported a large bivalve from the early Cretaceous seeps at Rottier, southeastern France. This bivalve was identified (but not figured) by Macsotay (1980) as the lucinid Pseudomiltha aff. germani. The published figures of this species are insufficient for identification and our own sampling at this site revealed only fragmentary material. However, Thieuloy’s (1972) image shows a specimen with radial sculpture, which is not seen in B. carinata .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Bivalvia

Order

Lucinida

Family

Lucinidae

Genus

Beauvoisina

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