Tabelliscolex chengjiangensis, Han & Liu & Zhang & Zhang & Shu, 2007

Han, Jian, Liu, Jianni, Zhang, Zhifei, Zhang, Xingliang & Shu, Degan, 2007, Trunk ornament on the palaeoscolecid worms Cricocosmia and Tabelliscolex from the Early Cambrian Chengjiang deposits of China, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 52 (2), pp. 423-431 : 426-427

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.13741646

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0388225B-B25D-3D3D-FC95-F9D6FA4D86DE

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Tabelliscolex chengjiangensis
status

sp. nov.

Tabelliscolex chengjiangensis sp. nov.

Figs. 1G View Fig , 4A View Fig .

Derivation of the name: After the type locality.

Holotype: ELI−0001219, part and counterpart.

Type locality: Ma'anshan section, Changing County, Yunnan Province, China.

Type horizon: ( Eoredlichia –Wutingaspis Zone) Yu’anshan Member, Heilinpu Formation, Early Cambrian.

Material.— Holotype only.

Diagnosis.—Elongate trunk with annuli that bear a pair of elongate elliptic macroplates on each, constructed by hexagonally arranged tubercles. It differs from Tabelliscolex hexagonus by having a concentric lamina in each tubercle and possibly lacking a dorsal sclerite on each annulus.

Description.—The holotype, ELI−0001219, is completely composed of more than 76 pairs of long elliptical sclerites. All these sclerites are constructed from hexagonally arranged hemi−spherical tubercles (pits) ( Fig. 4A View Fig 1 View Fig , A 2 View Fig ) same with that of Tabelliscolex hexagonus (see Figs. 1F View Fig , 4B View Fig 1 –B View Fig 3 View Fig ; see also Han et al. 2003a: pl. 1; Huang 2005: figs. 44–46), thus each sclerite usually has six others surrounding it while the marginal ones have four others. These tubercles are ca. 30 ̊m and the inner surface of the sclerites has an additionally inner circlet within the pit ( Fig. 4A View Fig 3 View Fig , A 4 View Fig ).

SEM analysis of Tabelliscolex hexagonus reveals that the plates are mainly preserved as irregularly shaped argillaceous mineral crystals ( Fig. 4B 4 View Fig ) and microspherules that further consist of short plate−like mineral crystals ( Fig. 4B View Fig 5 View Fig , B 6 View Fig ). Some needle−like minerals are present within the pit of a plate ( Fig. 4B View Fig 7, B 8). This is also the case for Tabelliscolex chengjiangensis sp. nov. EDX and element mapping shows that the plates of Tabelliscolex chengjiangensis sp. nov. are mainly composed of oxygen, aluminum, and silicon, representing aluminosilicates, with a lesser amount of iron representing iron oxide, and phosphorus and calcium representing apatite phosphate, as well as organic carbon (6%) that can be found in the mapping area ( Fig. 5 View Fig ; Table 2). The plates could not be distinguished from the surrounding trunk in the element mapping, but it did reveal that the fossil is composed mainly of oxygen, aluminum, silicon, components of the aluminosilicates.

Discussion.— Tabelliscolex hexagonus was described as bearing two sets of trunk sclerites, one row of elliptic plates on the dorsal side and two lateral rows of elongate elliptical plates, so that each annulus has three sclerites ( Han et al. 2003a). The holotype specimen of T. chengjiangensis sp. nov. does not preserve the equivalent dorsal sclerites of T. hexagonus ; thus, such structure need more specimens to be confirmed.

It seems unlikely that the concentric laminae in T. chengjiangensis sp. nov. are artefacts of preservation; they are also not newly secreted cuticle replacing older ones because the holotype specimen had already been molted.

Stratigraphic and geographic range.— Type locality only.

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