Volgia deftera, Ernst & Wyse Jackson & Aretz, 2015

Ernst, Andrej, Wyse Jackson, Patrick N. & Aretz, Markus, 2015, Bryozoan fauna from the Mississippian (Visean) of Roque Redonde (Montagne Noire, southern France), Geodiversitas 37 (2), pp. 151-213 : 162-166

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5252/g2015n2a2

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:BA9B2FF0-9D3B-44AF-894F-419DE5AE4C13

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/17CE5130-D3CB-4D57-97E1-73777D8237C8

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:17CE5130-D3CB-4D57-97E1-73777D8237C8

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Volgia deftera
status

sp. nov.

Volgia deftera View in CoL n. sp.

( Figs 11 View FIG B-F; 12A-F; Appendix)

Evactinopora sp. – Ernst 2005: 51, fig. 1C-E, G. ETYMOLOGY. — The species name refers to the being the second known species of the genus (from Greek “ defteros ” – the second).

HOLOTYPE. — SMF 21.802 View Materials .

PARATYPES. — SMF 21.803- SMF 21.814.

TYPE LOCALITY. — Roque Redonde (Montagne Noire, southern France).

TYPE HORIZON. — Carboniferous, Mississippian (upper Visean).

DIAGNOSIS. — Crucifix-shaped colonies with relatively thick branches; mesotheca with median tubuli and longitudinal ridges parallel to growth direction; thin complete diaphragms occasionally present; hemisepta absent; lunaria weakly developed, irregularly horseshoeshaped; vesicles moderately large, polygonal in tangential section, with rounded roofs, arranged in 1-2 rows between autozooecia, 10-12 surrounding each autozooecial aperture; stereom thick, consisting of laminated material, completely separating autozooecia in exozone, containing abundant tubules; metazooecia (? exozonal tubes) locally abundant, flask-shaped, restricted to stereom; maculae lacking.

DESCRIPTION Colony consisting of erect bifoliate lobes, with secondary branches diverging at right angles in crucifix-shaped pattern. Branches 3.30-3.35 mm wide and 1.44-2.10 mm thick. Mesotheca 0.010 -0.015 mm thick, with a dark and thin middle layer and two light and thick outer layers, containing median tubuli and longitudinal ridges parallel to growth direction. Median tubuli 0.015 -0.020 mm in diameter consisting of hyaline calcite, rounded in transverse section, developing short and densely spaced lateral projections ( Fig. 12A, B View FIG ). Autozooecia recumbent on the mesotheca or epitheca for a relatively long distance, then bending upwards abruptly, intersecting the surface almost perpendicularly. Thin, complete diaphragms in autozooecia occasionally present. Autozooecial apertures circular to oval. Lunaria weakly developed, irregularly horseshoe-shaped.Vesicular skeleton well developed, covered in exozone by thick stereom. Vesicles moderately large, polygonal in tangential section, with rounded roofs, arranged in 1-2 rows between autozooecia, 10-12 surrounding each autozooecial aperture. Stereom thick, consisting of laminated material, completely separating autozooecia in exozone, containing abundant tubules. Tubules 0.010 -0.015 mm in diameter, with hyaline cores and narrow laminated sheaths. Indistinct maculae consisting of stereom and metazooecia (exozonal tubes) present. Metazooecia (? exozonal tubes) locally abundant, flask-shaped, restricted to stereom.

COMPARISON

The new species differs from Volgia arborescens ( Stuckenberg, 1895) by larger autozooecial apertures (0.17-0.29 mm vs 0.14-0.15 mm in Volgia arborescens ). Furthermore, no heterozooecia were reported in V. arborescens . Evactionopora sp. ( Ernst 2005: 51) from the Mississippian (Visean) of Sauerland ( Germany) is placed in the new species. It possesses five rays instead of four. However, that is a result of the bifurcation of one ray. Otherwise, it shows typical crucifix pattern ( Ernst 2005, Fig. 1C View FIG ). That specimen has branches of 4.2-4.6 mm width and 1.5-1.6 mm thickness.

SMF

Forschungsinstitut und Natur-Museum Senckenberg

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Bryozoa

Class

Stenolaemata

Order

Cystoporida

Family

Hexagonellidae

Genus

Volgia

Loc

Volgia deftera

Ernst, Andrej, Wyse Jackson, Patrick N. & Aretz, Markus 2015
2015
Loc

Evactinopora

ERNST A. 2005: 51
2005
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