Squalorajidae Woodward 1886
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4081/nhs.2023.642 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DBB32C-FFF7-FB64-ED6F-062DFF45FA1C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Squalorajidae Woodward 1886 |
status |
|
Family Squalorajidae Woodward 1886
Remarks: The family includes the single genus Squaloraja Riley 1833, with two nominal species, both from the Lower Lias (bucklandi zone to basal semicostatum zone in the lower Sinemurian; Paul Davis pers. comm., 2021) of Lyme Regis, Dorset (UK): the type species S. polyspondyla (Agassiz 1836) (for full discussion on authorship assignment see Patterson, 1965: 117) and S. tenuispina Woodward 1886. The latter species is known from a single isolated frontal clasper only (NHMUK PV P.2081, Egerton Coll.; Woodward, 1886: 529, pl. 55, fig. 6) ( Fig. 5A View Fig ). However, Smith & Patterson (1988: 182) have pointed out that “two species of Squaloraja have been named but they cannot be distinguished”, considering S. tenuispina apparently conspecific with the other Lyme Regis specimens. A comprehensive review of the squalorajid frontal claspers, both isolated and on articulated specimens at the NHMUK leads us to support Smith & Patterson’s statement. The two characters used by Woodward (1886) to define S. tenuispina and distinguish it from the claspers of S. polyspondyla were the slender nature of the trunk of the clasper and the presence of an acuminate, pointed distal tip. The first thing to note is that the holotype of S. tenuispina is complete and measures 105 mm from the base to the distal tip. This makes it one of the shortest frontal claspers in the NHMUK collection. NHMUK PV OR 47402 is an articulated skull with an 82 mm long frontal clasper preserved in life position ( Fig. 5B View Fig ). Like the 112 mm long, virtually complete clasper in NHMUK PV OR 43307 ( Fig. 5C View Fig ), the structure is slender and although the tip is not sharply pointed, neither is it blunt or rounded. We conclude that the isolated clasper represented by S. tenuispina falls within an accepted range of morphological variation for S. polyspondyla and that S. tenuispina should therefore be considered its junior synonym.
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.