Nabaviella sp.
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00930.2021 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B4442D-F81A-FF82-7A40-16D1FE1AF8DA |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Nabaviella sp. |
status |
|
Fig. 76 View Fig .
Material.—Four calcium phosphatic internal moulds and coatings, SMNH Sp11495–11498, from samples 19/5.5 and 20/1B, Erkeket Formation, Khorbusuonka River, Siberia,
Russia. Lower Botoman stage (correlated with the lower part of Cambrian Stage 4).
Description.—Clavulate spicules consisting of a prominent straight slowly tapering axial ray (shaft), which bears a bulbous swelling ( Fig. 76C View Fig arrowed) at presumably proximal end of the spicule, and a star-like disc (umbel) at the other (presumably distal) end. The disc, up to 0.5 mm in diameter, consists of 11–13 short rays slightly flattened proximally and recurved distally. The shaft is up to 1.3 mm long ( Fig. 76C View Fig ), circular in cross-section, up to 0.2 mm in diameter at the disc ( Fig. 76A View Fig ). A transversally broken spicule ( Fig. 76B View Fig 1 View Fig ) displays a wide axial canal having a circular cross-section, ca. 0.1 mm in diameter at the disc. There is a short distal knob, probably representing a reduced axial ray on the opposite side of the disc ( Fig. 76A View Fig 2 View Fig and D 1 View Fig arrowed). The moulding surface of the spicule displays an irregular scalloped ornamentation ( Fig. 76B View Fig ).
Remarks.— Mostler and Mosleh-Yazdi (1976) figured spicules with 7–11 rays as syntypes of their type species, including a clavulate anchoring spicule with eight curved paratangential rays as the holotype. This microfossil is compared with either chancelloriid sclerites ( Mostler and Mosleh-Yazdi 1976) or with hexactinellid spicules, including hemidiscs ( Mostler 1985), clavules ( Webby and Trotter 1993) and tylodiscs, and demosponge paraclavules ( Reitner and Mehl 1995). All these spicule types, however, are microscleres. Peel (2019) erroneously quoted “ N. gracilis Mostler and Mosleh-Yazdi, 1976 ” as the type species, but there was no such a species in the original paper. Nabaviella spicules can be also morphologically compared to calcareous meroms of radiocyaths. By contrast, meroms lack axial canals and distal knobs but have straight or slightly recurved radiating and bifurcating coplanar rays at both proximal and distal ends ( Zhuravlev and Sayutina 1985).
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