Kamilocella, Taylor & Martha & Gordon, 2018

Taylor, Paul D., Martha, Silviu O. & Gordon, Dennis P., 2018, Synopsis of ‘ onychocellid’ cheilostome bryozoan genera, Journal of Natural History (J. Nat. Hist.) 52 (25 - 26), pp. 1657-1721 : 1685-1687

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2018.1481235

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:63A31AD2-F049-42CB-A45B-557014DC286E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4747856

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/21643B29-B0D5-44E8-9D7D-2DA56604441C

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:21643B29-B0D5-44E8-9D7D-2DA56604441C

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Kamilocella
status

gen. nov.

Genus Kamilocella View in CoL gen. nov.

( Figure 16 View Figure 16 )

Type species

Eschara latilabris Reuss, 1872 View in CoL . Cretaceous, late Cenomanian ( Actinocamax plenus View in CoL ammonite Zone), Hoher Stein Quarry, Dresden-Plauen, Saxony, Germany .

Diagnosis

Colony erect bilaminar or encrusting, sometimes multilamellar. Autozooids pyriform; zooidal boundaries marked by grooves. Cryptocyst containing a peripheral cavity in all or most autozooids, leaving the remaining part surrounding the opesia upstanding. Gymnocyst lacking. Opesia subterminal, occupying about one-third of the frontal surface, roundish or transversely elliptical, lacking opesiular indentations or constrictions. Ovicells hyperstomial,?exterior-walled ( Figure 16 View Figure 16 (a,d)). Avicularia vicarious, slightly smaller than autozooids ( Figure 16 View Figure 16 (c)), bilaterally symmetrical; opesia roundish, located centrally, usually with a median proximal slit; rostrum pointed.

Etymology

For Czech bryozoologist Kamil Zágoršek, with the suffix ‘– cella ’ taken from Onychocella . Remarks

The new genus is erected for erect bilaminar or encrusting onychocellid species with very thick calcification of the cryptocyst that usually develops a depression surrounding a raised portion around the opesia. This ‘raised’ cryptocyst or ‘insula’ in the sense of Voigt (1956) takes the appearance of a beard ( Figure 16 View Figure 16 (b,c)) while the depression has been described as a type 2 peripheral cavern by Koromyslova et al. (2018). Peripheral caverns are found only in a few onychocellids and coscinopleurids ( Voigt 1956; Taylor and McKinney 2006; Koromyslova et al. 2018).

The type species is found in the late Cenomanian of Dresden-Plauen, Saxony, Germany, and the late Cenomanian/early Turonian of Kaňk, Central Bohemian Region, Czech Republic ( Počta 1892; Voigt 1989). Whether the specimens described as latilabris from the late Cenomanian of the Aqtash Mountain, Tashkent Region, Uzbekistan ( Favorskaya 1990, 1996) are really conspecific is unclear. In addition to the type species, the following species are referred to the new genus: (1) Eschara acis d’ Orbigny, 1851, from the Cenomanian to Campanian of several French localities in (the original material of this species needs revision and is likely to represent more than one species); (2) Onychocella aff. acis (d’ Orbigny, 1851) from the late Cenomanian of Dohna-Kahlebusch, Saxony, Germany ( Martha et al. 2017); (3) ‘ Onychocella ’ barbata Martha, Niebuhr and Scholz, 2017 from the late Cenomanian of Dresden-Plauen, Saxony, Germany; (4) Eschara cenomana d’ Orbigny, 1851 (= Biflustra cenomana d’ Orbigny, 1852 ) from the middle Cenomanian of Le Mans, Pays de la Loire, France and (5) Eschara labiata Počta, 1892 ; from the early Turonian of Kaňk, differing from the sympatric type species in having opesiular indentations ( Voigt 1989). Other, as yet undescribed, species assignable to the new genus are common in Cenomanian strata of Western Europe.

Range

Cretaceous (middle Cenomanian to Campanian).

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