Eucalathis methanophila Bitner, 2010

Kaim, Andrzej, Bitner, Maria Aleksandra, Jenkins, Robert G. & Hikida, Yoshinori, 2010, A monospecific assemblage of terebratulide brachiopods in the Upper Cretaceous seep deposits of Omagari, Hokkaido, Japan, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 55 (1), pp. 73-84 : 79-80

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2009.0068

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03F6FD7F-FFA2-FFDC-EB91-FAC818A3FAE5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Eucalathis methanophila Bitner
status

sp. nov.

Eucalathis methanophila Bitner View in CoL sp. nov.

Figs. 2–5.

Etymology: From methane and Latin suffix, phila, meaning to like. Refers to its occurrence at the methane seep.

Type material: Holotype: UMUT MB30198 ( Fig. 2A 1 –A View Fig 5 View Fig ), articulated shell ; Paratypes: UMUT MB30199−30202 ( Fig. 2B–E), articulated shells .

Type locality: Omagari site, Nakagawa area , Northern Hokkaido, Japan. Coordinates 44 ° 39’ 26’’N, 144 ° 2’ 25’’E GoogleMaps .

Type horizon: Hydrocarbon seep deposits of Omagari Formation , Campanian, Upper Cretaceous .

Diagnosis.— Eucalathis of medium size with surface ornamented by numerous beaded ribs, high beak with large, oval foramen, anterior commissure rectimarginate, loop wide with subparallel descending branches narrowed anteriorly.

Measurements (in mm).—See Table 2.

Description.—External morphology: Shell small (maximum length 5.7 mm), auriculate, variable in outline from widely subtriangular to elongate oval, with maximum width usually at two thirds of shell length. Shell biconvex with ventral valve slightly more convex. Shell surface covered with numerous beaded, tuberculate ribs (20–30) which increase in number by intercalations and bifurcations; growth lines distinct ( Fig. 2B 4 View Fig , F 1 View Fig , F 2). Lateral commissures nearly straight; anterior commissure rectimarginate to incipiently uniplicate. Hinge line wide, slightly curved. Beak relatively high, erect to suberect with sharp, distinct ridges. Foramen large, oval; disjunct deltidial plates form narrow ridges.

doi:10.4202/app.2009.0068

Internal morphology: Two specimens were sectioned of which the better preserved is figured ( Fig. 3 View Fig ). Pedicle collar present. Teeth long, smooth, nearly horizontally inserted into large dental sockets. Inner socket ridges massive, long. No hinge plates observed. Crura short, massive. Loop short and wide with subparallel to slightly divergent descending branches that narrow anteriorly ( Fig. 4 View Fig ). Transverse band not preserved in either of the sectioned specimens.

Shell microstructure: Two specimens were studied. The shell is composed of two layers: a primary microgranular layer and a secondary fibrous layer ( Fig. 5 View Fig ). In both cases the shell is diagenetically modified, fragmentary fibres of the secondary layer are completely fused ( Fig. 5A View Fig 1 View Fig ). The primary layer is 27–53 µm thick in the ribs and 12–25 µm in sulci. The secondary layer is 144–205 µm thick in the ribs and 100–114 µm in sulci. The total thickness of the shell is 127 to 241 µm. The punctae are more densely distributed in the rib regions ( Fig. 5 View Fig ).

Remarks.—The investigated specimens display, both externally and in a loop character, typical features of the genus Eucalathis . This genus was erected for the specimens similar to Terebratulina but having disjunct crural processes (Fischer and Oehler 1890); in Terebratulina crural processes are united to form a ring. In the ornamentation of the numerous fine ribs the specimens from Japan resemble three living species, Indo−Pacific E. murrayi ( Davidson, 1878) , eastern Atlantic E. tuberata (Jeffreys, 1874) , and Caribbean E. cubensis Cooper, 1977 but differ in having higher beak and wider loop ( Davidson 1878, 1886; Cooper 1977, 1981b; Zezina 1987). Additionally the studied specimens are nearly twice as large as E. tuberata .

Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Campanian (Upper Cretaceous) seep carbonate at Omagari (Hokkaido, Japan).

UMUT

University Museum, University of Tokyo

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