Patruliuspora, F.Barattolo & V.Ionesi & P.Tibuleac, 2019
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00537.2018 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10999718 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D62622-D142-FFBD-FFDD-D900FEFCFB26 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Patruliuspora |
status |
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Genus Patruliuspora nov.
Etymology: In honour of Dan Patrulius (1921–1982), pioneer of dasycladalean studies in Romania.
Type species: Chalmasia morelleti Pokorný, 1948 ; middle Miocene , Podivin, Czech Republic .
Species included: Halicoryne carpatica Mišík, 1987 , Upper Triassic Carnian–Rhaetian) of the Western Carpathians; Acicularia valeti Segonzac, 1970 ( Segonzac 1970, 1976) from the Paleocene of the French Pyrenees. It is possible that other species referred to the genus Acicularia but displaying Type D biomineralization ( Fig. 11 View Fig ) could belong to Patruliuspora .
Diagnosis. — Group of mineralized gametangia (cysts), immersed or not in a calcified mass to form ellipsoidal, irregular to variously elongated club shaped aggregates of cysts.
Remarks.— Patruliuspora is restricted to fossil taxa falling in types C and D of Fig. 11 View Fig . As discussed above, they may be the fossil remains of polyphysacean gametophores, presently belonging to Chalmasia , Halicoryne , or Acetabularia . In any case, we cannot exclude the possibility that in the past Parvocaulis or other extinct genera of Polyphysaceae , if not Triploporellaceae , might have produced equivalent mineralized aggregates of cysts.
Numerous genera are known to be mineralized parts of reproductive organs of dasycladaleans. Some of these are thought to be by-products of extracellular biomineralization of single gametophores (ampullae), Dameryella Bignot and Génot, 1998 ( Génot 2009), or tufts of gametophores Carpenterella Morellet and Morellet, 1922 ( Génot 2009). Small bodies formed by intracellular biomineralization include Acicularia Archiac, 1843 , Terquemella Morellet and Morellet, 1922 , Frederica Barta-Calmus, 1966 and Russoella Barattolo, 1983 . From a morphological point of view, Terquemella and Russoella are discoidal and not ellipsoidal, and Acicularia and Frederica are elongate club-shaped and ovoidal, respectively ( Génot 2009). However, all those genera show biomineralization of type B ( Fig. 11 View Fig ), rather than type C or D as in Patruliuspora .
Stratigraphic and geographic range.— Species of Patruliuspora ranges from Late Triassic to Miocene and includes at least three species: Patruliuspora morelleti ( Pokorný, 1948) comb. nov., P. carpatica ( Mišík, 1987) comb. nov., and P. valeti ( Segonzac, 1970) comb. nov.
The Jurassic–Cretaceous gap can be interpreted in different ways, for example: (i) because the taxon is a form-genus, it may assemble fossils from different contexts, but with similar morphologies (e.g., cladosporous, choristosporous, or goniosporous type of reproduction); (ii) the ellipsoidal aggregates may display different type of mineralization (e.g., type B and C of Fig. 11 View Fig ). Viewed in this light, Upper Jurassic–Lower Cretaceous ellipsoidal aggregates such as Acicularia elongata Carozzi, 1955 , and Acicularia endoi Praturlon, 1964 could be accommodated within the genus Patruliuspora .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Patruliuspora
Barattolo, Filippo, Ionesi, Viorel & Ţibuleac, Paul 2019 |
Patruliuspora
F.Barattolo, V.Ionesi & P.Tibuleac 2019 |
Halicoryne carpatica Mišík, 1987
Misik 1987 |
Acicularia valeti
Segonzac 1970 |
Acicularia
Archiac 1843 |