Dallithyris Muir-Wood, 1959

Bitner, Maria Aleksandra, 2007, Recent brachiopods from the Austral Islands, French Polynesia, South-Central Pacific, Zoosystema 29 (3), pp. 491-502 : 495-496

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.5393009

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A14C41-FFBB-FFC7-FD68-FADDAA9BA672

treatment provided by

Marcus

scientific name

Dallithyris Muir-Wood, 1959
status

 

Genus Dallithyris Muir-Wood, 1959 View in CoL

TYPE SPECIES. — Dallithyris murrayi Muir-Wood, 1959 by original designation (Muir-Wood 1959: 305).

Dallithyris pacifica Bitner, 2006 ( Figs 1 View FIG I-K; 2C, D; Table 2)

Dallithyris pacifica Bitner, 2006b: 20-22 View in CoL , fig. 2A-J.

MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Austral Islands. Marotiri, BENTHAUS, stn DW 1884, 2 ventral valves. — Stn DW 1885, 4 complete specimens, 6 ventral valves, 2 dorsal valves. — Neilson Reef, stn DW 1923, 1 complete specimen, 1 ventral valve. All complete specimens are empty shells.

DEPTH RANGE. — 360- 840 m.

MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 2.

REMARKS

Dallithyris pacifica was originally described from off the Fiji Islands. The studied specimens differ from those previously described in being slightly larger (maximum observed length is 32 mm). The shell is subtriangular in outline, thin, biconvex, smooth with fine numerous growth lines. The anterior commissure is rectimarginate. The beak is suberect, labiate with large permesothyrid foramen. The pedicle collar is short, excavated. The cardinalia have long, slender inner socket ridges and a small, transverse cardinal process. The outer hinge plates are wide, triangular. The loop is short with a very broad, angularly arched transverse band. D. pacifica differs from another short-looped brachiopod in the investigated material, Acrobrochus marotiriensis n. sp., in being larger and having a much thinner shell. Those two species also differ strongly internally in the width of outer hinge plates and the nature of the transverse band.

The shell ultrastructure of Dallithyris has been investigated for the first time. The analysis shows the shell consisted of three layers ( Fig. 2C, D View FIG ). The primary layer is thin (18-24 µm) and built of acicular crystallites. The secondary layer is 23-45 µm thick and made up of anvil-shaped fibres. The tertiary layer is much thicker (550-577 µm) than the two first and composed of prismatic calcite. The thickness of the shell is 620-643 µm at the observed section. Thus, Dallithyris belongs to the group of short-looped brachiopods with triple-layered shell.

In the revised edition of the Treatise only two species have been assigned to the genus Dallithyris (Logan in press). The type species, D. murrayi Muir-Wood, 1959 , from the central Indian Ocean is much bigger than D. pacifica and has a uniplicate anterior commissure. Dallithyris fulva (Blochmann, 1906) from southern Australia and Tasmania differs from D. pacifica in its outline and larger foramen ( Cooper 1983). This species occurs in shallower waters than D. pacifica .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Brachiopoda

Class

Rhynchonellata

Order

Terebratulida

Family

Terebratulidae

Loc

Dallithyris Muir-Wood, 1959

Bitner, Maria Aleksandra 2007
2007
Loc

Dallithyris pacifica

BITNER M. A. 2006: 22
2006
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