Taxonomic applications of the esophageal flapper valve in Bairdoppilata and Glyptobairdia (Bairdiidae, Ostracoda), with comments on anatomy, ontogeny, and geography
Author
Maddocks, Rosalie F.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-08-17
5175
3
301
342
journal article
124035
10.11646/zootaxa.5175.3.1
509d2bb8-bdff-4757-b45a-5d0cbccc31b4
1175-5326
7003585
44FB9C3D-3188-4BFB-BDB8-C1324729A396
Genus
BAIRDOPPILATA
Coryell, Sample and Jennings, 1935
1935
Bairdoppilata
Coryell, Sample and Jennings
: 3.
1963
Bairdia
M’Coy.
—Morkhoven, p. 32 [part].
1969
Bairdoppilata (Bairdoppilata)
Coryell, Sample and Jennings.
—Maddocks, p. 66.
1995
Bairdoppilata
Coryell, Sample and Jennings.
—Maddocks, p. 215.
Type
species:
Bairdoppilata martyni
Coryell, Sample & Jennings, 1935
was described from the
Chickasawhay Formation
of
Mississippi
(Oligocene)
.
Species Included:
The soft anatomy has been described, at least in part, for only 15 named species of
Bairdoppilata
(
Table 2
), although others have been designated in open nomenclature. Before this report, the esophageal valve had been illustrated for only two of those species.
Anatomical Remarks:
For living species, the genera
Bairdoppilata
and
Glyptobairdia
(so far as known) are identified by seven key anatomical traits:
(1) Supplemental dentition is developed on the anterodorsal and posterodorsal margins of the valves (
Figs. 2C
,
8M–P
,
9N–Q
,
12F–G
).
(2) The anterodistal seta of the A2, which is a slender seta in other genera, is a large claw (1Q, 5F, 6A–B, 8A–B, 13D, 15E, 16F, 18F). In adults of most species, this claw is almost as long and thick as the main distal claw, resembling a scissors blade. This claw emerges only at the last (pre-adult) molt, and it is represented in instars by a fusiform anlage (
Figs. 1A, O
,
14F
).
(3) The fused claw of the A2 is smooth or undulate, rather than barbed, serrate or pectinate (
Figs. 1Q
,
6F, 6A–B
,
8A–B
,
13D
,
15E
,
16F
,
18F
).
(4) The vibratory plate of the fifth limb has four segregated setae in both sexes (a trait shared also by
Paranesidea
and some other genera).
(5) The furca has seven setae of medium and long lengths (
Fig. 1E
,
13A
,
14A
).
(6) The hemipenis has a complex distal configuration, with several appendages on the medial and terminal elements, which may have locking, sensory and protective functions (
Figs. 5C–E
,
6G–H
,
7A–D
,
9D–H
,
13A–B
,
18
D-E). On an erect specimen these processes are clearly visible and offer taxonomic information. In non-erect specimens, these processes are folded down and overlap, and it is difficult to see details. The copulatory rod is confined within a fairly long, arcuate tube (
Figs. 5C–E
,
6G–H
,
7A–D
,
9D–H
,
13A–B
,
18D–E
) and ends in a slender tip with two delicate processes (
Fig. 9F
).
(7) The configuration of the esophageal flapper valve contributes a seventh unifying trait for
Bairdoppilata
. The plate is relatively thin and wedge-shaped, with a curved, multidentate posterior margin, where a series of nodes or low teeth project dorsally and posteriorly (
Figs. 1G, M
;
5A
;
6C–E
;
8G–H
;
9A
;
10A–B
). The array is notable for the large number and evenness of the teeth, which are all about the same size and arranged in a single marginal row. The plate of
Glyptobairdia coronata
, as illustrated by
Rome (1960
,
Fig. 2D
), conforms to the same pattern.
This delicately serrate profile is easily distinguished from the smooth-edged, toothless plate of some other bairdioid genera (
Aponesidea
,
Havanardia
,
Mydionobairdia
,
Triebelina
, and a few species of
Neonesidea
). It resembles the pattern that is common in typical species of
Neonesidea
, except that the teeth are more numerous (12–18, compared with
6–10 in
Neonesidea
), smaller, and more nearly equal in size. The dorsal surface of the plate is apparently smooth, not tuberculate (as in
Bythocypris
) or spinose (as in
Paranesidea
).
The chitin framework of the mouth region (forehead, upper lip, atrium, lower lip, sternum) in
Bairdoppilata
is similar to that described for
Neonesidea
(
Maddocks 2015
,
2018
). A hemispherical swelling on the atrial surface of the lower lip, ringed with concentric rows of tiny cilia and surmounted by a flagellate seta, protrudes centrally into the atrium (
Figs. 6K–L
,
9I
). That flagellate seta has been seen in species of
Neonesidea
and
Paranesidea
, as well, and should be looked for in other genera. The taxonomic value of the head capsule has not been investigated for
Bairdiidae
, although some special adaptations are expressed in the flexible jaws of
Pussellidae
(
Pussella
,
Anchistrocheles
,
Bythopussella
).
Taxonomic Remarks:
Bairdoppilata
is an ancient genus. Fossil species, recognized by supplemental dentition on the anterior and posterior ends of the dorsal overhang, are reported in Jurassic, Cretaceous and Cenozoic faunas.
Kempf (1986
,
1995
,
2004
) listed more than 100 nominal species. Today, it is global and represented by one or several species in most assemblages. The WoRMS database includes 39 species, most of which are Holocene or Neogene (
Brandão & Karanovic 2021
).
The subgenera proposed by
Maddocks (1969)
proved to be cumbersome and unnecessary, and they should be ignored (as recommended by
Maddocks 1995
).
Glyptobairdia
is more appropriately ranked as a separate genus. The restriction of
Bairdoppilata
to low-latitude, shallow-water forms (suggested by
Maddocks 1969
) is not sustainable. No distinction should be made (by use of a question mark) for species collected from high latitudes or deep water, unless supported by morphological attributes.