Enigmaconidae Mackinnon, 1985

Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Clausen, Sébastien & Vendrasco, Michael J., 2015, An early Cambrian fauna of skeletal fossils from the Emyaksin Formation, northern Siberia, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 60 (2), pp. 421-512 : 436

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2012.0004

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C3891D-1523-C27D-FFF5-FC99CDB2F930

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Enigmaconidae Mackinnon, 1985
status

 

Family Enigmaconidae Mackinnon, 1985 Genus Enigmaconus Mackinnon, 1985

Type species: Enigmaconus parvus Mackinnon, 1985 ; Ptychagnostus cassis Zone, Boomerangian Stage ; Cobb Valley, Nelson Province, South Island, New Zealand.

Remarks.— Enigmaconus Mackinnon, 1985 is represented by a similar pegma-bearing, but slightly cyrtoconic whith a more extended apex species E. parvus Mackinnon, 1985 . Pegma-like structures in the sub-apical part of the shell are also known from several forms of molluscs attributed to different genera. The pegma was first described in ribeirioid rostroconchs ( Pojeta and Runnegar 1976). It represents a hard internal plate that connected the left and right sides of the ribeirioid rostroconch shell and is visible as a groove on internal moulds. In some lower–middle Cambrian helcionellids, a similar structure is produced by a sub-apical invagination or internal thickening of the wall. When Enigmaconus and Eurekapegma were described from the Middle Cambian of New Zealand ( Mackinnon 1985), the pegma was known only from the cosmopolitan lower Cambrian mollusc Watsonella

= Heraultipegma View in CoL ). At that time, Watsonella View in CoL was considered a rostroconch ( Pojeta and Runnegar 1976), and Mackinnon

1985) speculated that Enigmaconus View in CoL may have been ancestral to rostroconchs, based on the shared characteristic of the pegma. Since that time, other pegma-bearing species have been reported from the lower Cambrian of France ( Kerber 1988) and Mongolia ( Esakova and Zhegallo 1996), middle Cambrian of Greenland ( Peel 1994) and Australia ( Vendrasco et al. 2010). Runnegar (1996) suggested that because of the widespread nature of pegma-like structures in Cambrian molluscs, they likely evolved convergently in different lineages.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Family

Enigmaconidae

Loc

Enigmaconidae Mackinnon, 1985

Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Clausen, Sébastien & Vendrasco, Michael J. 2015
2015
Loc

Enigmaconus

Mackinnon 1985
1985
Loc

Watsonella

Grabau 1900
1900
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