Revision of the Bivalvia from the Upper Jurassic Reuchenette Formation, Northwest Switzerland — Ostreoidea
Author
Koppka, Jens
text
Zootaxa
2015
3927
1
1
117
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.3927.1.1
c9f96009-d3d4-4977-9cd5-6004214d1036
1175-5326
288034
42B56D11-9B18-4FCC-B632-30A46AB0205C
Actinostreon gregareum
(J. Sowerby, 1815)
Fig. 20
; Pls. 16–18; Pl. 19.1–2; Pl. 22
* 1815
Ostrea gregarea
n. sp.
—J. Sowerby: p. 19, pl. 111, figs. 1, 3.
1815
Ostrea palmetta
n. sp.
—J. Sowerby: p. 20, pl. 111, fig. 2.
1817
Ostrea
crista-galli
n. sp. —W. Smith: p. 20, Coral Rag and Pisolite plate, fig. 4. 1822
Ostrea gregaria
[
sic
] Sow.—Young & Bird: p. 238, pl. 9, fig. 16.
1824
Ostrea solitaria
n. sp.
—J. de C. Sowerby: p. 105, pl. 468, fig. 1. 1825
Ostrea costatum
n. sp.
—J. de C. Sowerby: p. 143, pl. 488, fig. 3. 1831
Ostrea gregarea
Sow.
—Deshayes: p. 106, pl. 13, fig. 2.
p 1833b
Ostrea gregaria
Sow.
—Goldfuss: p. 7, pl. 74, figs. 2a
–
f.
? 1833b
Ostrea pulligera
nob.—Goldfuss: p. 5, pl. 72, figs. 11a–c.
1835
Ostrea solitaria
Sow.
—Roemer: p. 58, pl. 3, figs. 2a–c, pl. 13, fig. 4. 1836
Ostrea gregaria
[
sic
] Sow.—Bronn: p. 314, pl. 18, figs. 16a,b.
n 1837
Ostrea gregaria
[
sic
] Goldfuß—Koch & Dunker: p. 50, pl. 6, fig. 2. 1840c
Ostrea carinata
n. sp.
—J. de C. Sowerby: pl. 22, fig. 8.
n 1853
Ostrea gregarea
, Sow.
, var.—Morris & Lycett: p. 4, pl. 1, fig. 2.? 1853
Ostrea gregarea
, Sow.
—de Verneuil & Collomb: p. 164, pl. 3, fig. 6.? 1857b
Ostrea gregaria
[
sic
] Sow.—Quenstedt: p. 751, pl. 41, fig. 28.
1857b
Ostrea pulligera ascendens
Quenstedt—Quenstedt
: p. 751, pl. 91, fig. 29.? 1859
Ostrea gregaria
[
sic
] Sow.—Trautschold: p. 115, pl. 2, fig. 15.
1861
Ostrea solitaria
, Sow.
—Thurmann & Etallon: 53.
? 1862
Ostrea semisolitaria
, Et.
—Etallon
in
Thurmann & Etallon: p. 279, pl. 40, fig. 1. 1862
Ostrea solitaria
, Sow.
—Thurmann & Etallon: p. 281, pl. 40, fig. 4.? 1862
Ostrea vallata
, Etallon—Thurmann & Etallon
: p. 278.
1871
Ostrea gregarea
Sow.
—Phillips: p. 323, pl. 13, fig. 19.
? 1871
Ostrea gregarea
? Sow.
—Phillips: p. 181, pl. 10, fig. 4.
1871
Ostrea gregarea
, Sow.
—Terquem & Jourdy: p. 131.
1872
Ostrea pulligera
Goldfuss—de Loriol
et al
.: p. 402, pl. 24, figs.
1–6. 1875
Ostrea pulligera
Goldfuss—de Loriol & Pellat: p. 377, pl. 24, figs.
4–5. 1875
Ostrea Pulligera
(Quenst.)
—Pillet & Frommentel: p. 133, pl. 14, figs. 24–25. 1878
Alectryonia Potieri,
Bayle—Bayle
: pl. 131, figs. 2–5.
1878
Actinostreon solitarium
, Sowerby
, sp.—Bayle: p. 132, figs.
2–6. 1880
Ostrea solitaria
Sow.
—Damon: pl. 9, fig. 2.
1882
Ostrea gregaria
[
sic
] Sow.—Roeder: pl. 3, figs. 12a,b.
1883
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
rastellaris
, Münster
var.
moravica
Boehm—Boehm
: p. 658, pl. 70, figs. 27–30. 1888
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
costata
Sow., 1825
—Schlippe: p. 112, pl. 1, figs. 11–12.? 1888
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
Marshi
Sow., 1814
—Schlippe: p. 114, pl. 1, fig. 14–18. 1892
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
Pulligera
(Goldfuss)
—de Loriol: p. 342, pl. 36, fig. 4. 1892
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
solitaria
, Sow.
—de Loriol: p. 313, pl. 36, figs. 5, 6. 1893
Ostrea solitaria
Sow.
—Fiebelkorn: p. 396, pl. 13, fig. 14.
1893
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
pulligera
Goldfuss—Greppin
: p. 87, pl. 6, fig. 17, 18. 1894
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
vallata
Etallon—de Loriol: p. 75, pl. 9, figs. 5, 6. 1897
Ostrea gregaria
Sow.
—Reed: p. 45.
1897
Ostrea solitaria
Sow.
—Reed: p. 45.
1900
Ostrea pulligera
Goldf.
—Müller: p. 532, pl. 18, figs. 13–14.
1900
Ostrea gregarea
Sow.
var.
pterophora
, nob.—Cossmann: p. 47, pl. 5, figs. 3, 6. 1900
Alectryonia Asellus
, Merian
sp.—Greppin: p. 147, pl. 17, fig. 1–2, 5. 1900
Alectryonia
cfr.
rastellaris
(Münster)
—Greppin: p. 149, pl. 16, fig. 8. n 1901
Exogyra gregarea
Sow.
—Raspail: pl. 12, fig. 11.
1901
Alectryonia flabelloides
Schloth.
—Raspail: pl. 12, fig. 3.
1903
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
gregarea
Sow.
—Remeš: p. 218, pl. 21 (4), figs. 8a,b (Tithonian).
1903
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
pulligera ascendens
, Qu.
—Remeš: p. 218, pl. 21 (4), figs. 6a,b, 7a,b.
1903
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
) aff.
solitaria
Sow.
—Remeš: p. 217, pl. 21 (4), figs. 5a,b.
1910
Alectryonia gregarea
Sowerby—Lissajous
: p. 343, pl. 8, fig. 17.
1910
Alectryonia pulligera
Goldfuss
—Lissajous: p. 334, pl. 8, fig. 18.
1911
Ostrea
(
Rastellum
)
gregarea
Sow.
—Rollier: p. 277.
1911
Ostrea
(
Exogyra
)
semisolitaria
Etallon—Flamand
: p. 924, pl. 9, figs. 2, 2a, 3–4, 5, 5a, 6.
1922
Alectryonia costata
(Sowerby)
—Cossmann: p. 4, pl. 5, figs. 5–8.
1924
Alectryonia pulligera
—Jourdy: pl. 1, fig. 3, no. 2.
1925
Alectryonia pulligera
(Goldf.)
—Weir: p. 86, pl. 12, fig. 5.
1925
Alectryonia rastellaris
(Münster)
—Weir: p. 86, pl. 12, figs. 15–17.
1925
Alectryonia solitaria
(Sow.)
—Weir: p. 85, pl. 12, fig. 9.
1925
Alectryonia
aff.
solitaria
(Sow.)
—Weir: p. 86, pl. 12, fig. 8.
1931
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
gregaria
[
sic
], Sow.—Yin Tsan-hsun: p. 123, pl. 11, fig. 17.
1931
Ostrea
(
Alectryonia
)
solitaria
, Sow.
—Yin Tsan-hsun: p. 124, pl. 11, fig. 18.
1931
Lopha pulligera
(Goldf.)
—Diaz-Romero: p. 40, pl. 3, fig. 12, 13.
1933
Lopha gregarea
(Sow.)
var.
solitaria
—Oria: p. 34, pl. 2, figs. 7, 1
–
3, pl. 4, figs. 4–6, 8.
1933
Lopha gregarea
(J. Sowerby)
—Arkell: p. 183, pl. 22, figs. 5, 6, pl. 23, figs. 1–4.
1933
Lopha solitaria
(Sowerby)
—Arkell: p. 185, pl. 22, fig. 4, pl. 23, figs. 5
–
7.
1935
Lopha solitaria
(Sow.)
—Cox: p. 171, pl. 17, figs. 9
–
12.
1936
Alectryonia gregarea
Sow.
—Besairie: pl. 7, fig. 17.
1938
Alectryonia gregarea
Sowerby—Chavan & Montocchio
: p. 72, fig. 122a.
1939
Lopha Perdalianae
(MGH.)—Stefanini: p. 195, pl. 22, figs. 4, 5.
1939
Lopha solitaria
(Sow.)
—Stefanini: p. 197, pl. 22, figs. 6
–
7.
1952
Lopha gregarea
(J. Sowerby)
—Cox: p. 96, pl. 4, fig. 2, pl. 10, figs. 7–13.
1956
Lopha gregarea
(J. Sow.)
—Agrawal: p. 89, pl. 9, fig. 13.
1959
Lopha solitaria
(Sowerby)
—Jaboli: p. 36, pl. 5, fig. 1.
1960
Lopha solitaria
(J. de C. Sowerby)—Joubert: pl. 9, figs. 1, 2a–c.
1960
Lopha gregarea
(J. Sowerby)
—Tamura: p. 239, pl. 2, fig. 24.
1961
Lopha
cf.
gregarea
(Sowerby, 1815)
—Sibiriakova: p. 102, pl. 13, figs. 11–13.
1964
Lopha Solitaria
(J. Sowerby)
—Maithani: p. 510, pl. 31, fig. 2.
1965
Lopha gregarea
(J. Sowerby)
—Cox: p. 68, pl. 9, fig. 5.
1965
Lopha solitaria
(J. de C. Sowerby)—Cox: p. 69, pl. 9, fig. 4.
1965
Lopha solitaria
(Sowerby)
s.s.
—Freneix: p. 72 (24), pl. 3, figs. 1, 2.
1965
Lopha solitaria
(Sowerby)
matmatensis
n. ssp.
—Freneix: p. 73 (25), pl. 3, figs. 4a,b, 5a,b, 6a,b, 7a,b, text-
fig. 7a, c.
1965
Lopha solitaria
(Sowerby)
subpulligera
n. ssp—Freneix: p. 76 (28), pl. 3, figs. 3a,b, 5, 9a,b, 10, 11, 12a,b,
13, 14, text-fig. 7b, d1, d2.
1969
Lopha gregarea
(J. Sowerby)
—Fischer: p. 96, pl. 10, fig. 28.
1971
Lopha solitaria
(J. de C. Sowerby)—
Jordan
: p. 152, pl. 20, figs. 4a,b, 5a,b.
1971
Alectryonia pulligera
(Goldfuss, 1834)
—Pugaczewska: p. 234, pl. 8, figs. 1–15.
1971
Alectryonia flabelliformis
(Nilson
in
Goldfuss, 1840)—Pugaczewska: p. 238, pl. 4, figs. 1
–
10.
1971
Alectryonia gregarea
(Sowerby, 1816)
—Pugaczewska: p. 227, pl. 3, fig. 7, pl. 5, figs. 1–8, pl. 6, figs. 1–8,
pl. 9, figs. 2–3, pl. 10, fig. 3.
1971
Alectryonia rastellaris
(Münster, 1833)
—Pugaczewska: p. 232, pl. 6, fig. 9, pl. 7, figs.
1–3
, 5–7.
1971
Alectryonia solitaria
(Sowerby, 1825)
—Pugaczewska: p. 230, pl. 3, figs. 1–6, pl. 9, fig. 1.
1971
Alectryonia vallata
(
Etallon, 1862
)
—Pugaczewska: p. 236, pl. 19, fig. 3a–b, 4.
1973
Ostrea solitaria
Sow.
—Contini & Hantzpergue: p. 150, 152.
1973
Ostrea pulligera
Gold.
—Contini & Hantzpergue: p. 175.
1976
Lopha solitaria
(Sowerby)
—Ma Qi-hong in Gu Zhi-wei
et al
.: p. 323, pl. 35, figs. 34–35.
1977
Lopha
(
Rastellum
)
gregarea
(Sow.)
—Andreeva: pl. 5, figs. 1–5.
1979
Lopha solitaria
(Sowerby)
—Wen Shi-xuan: p. 303, pl. 92, fig. 8.
1984
Lopha gregarea
(Sowerby)
—Radulović & Mitrović-Petrović: p. 110, pl. 3, figs. 4–5.
1985
Lopha asellus namtuensis
Reed—Zhang
Zuo-ming
et al
.: p. 115, pl. 45, fig. 5.
1985
Lopha
cf.
gregarea
(Sowerby)
—Zhang Zuo-ming
et al
.: p. 115, pl. 45, fig. 3, 4.
1988
Arctostrea gregaria
[
sic
] (Sowerby)—Reiff: pl. 29, fig. 3.
? 1989
Lopha gregarea
(Sowerby)
—Matyia, Gutowski & Wierzbowski: pl. 3, fig. 4.
1990
Lopha
(
Actinostreon
)
gregarea
(J. Sow. 1816)
—Clausen & Wignall: p. 124, pl. 6, fig. c.
1990
Lopha
(
Rastellum
)
gregarea
(Sowerby, 1815)
—Dykan & Makarenko: p. 83, pl. 16, figs. 13, 15–20.
1990
Lopha
(
Lopha
)
pulligera
(Goldfuss, 1834)
—Dykan & Makarenko: p. 82, pl. 16, figs. 11, 12.? 1994
Actinostreon solitarium
(J. de C. Sowerby 1824)—Aberhan: p. 30, pl. 12, figs. 8–10. n 1995
Lopha
(
Lopha
)
solitaria
(J. de C. Sowerby, 1824)—Monari: p. 166
–
167, pl. 2, fig. 7.
1995
Actinostreon gregareum
(J. Sowerby 1815)
—Jaitly
et al
.: p. 186, pl. 13, fig. 13, pl. 14, figs. 1–5.
1997
Lopha gregarea
(Sowerby, 1815)
—Bernad: p. 14, pl. 2, fig. 4–7.
1998
Actinostreon gregareum
(J. Sowerby, 1816)
—Machalski: p. 614, fig. 4a–d, g–m.
1998
Actinostreon
sp.—Machalski: p. 627, fig. 11A–I.
1998
Lopha solitaria
—Breton: pl. 1, fig. 11.
1998
Actinostreon gregareum
(J. Sowerby 1815)
—Holzapfel: p. 105, pl. 6, figs. 18–19, 21.
1998
Actinostreon costatum
(J. de C. Sowerby 1825)—Holzapfel: p. 104, pl. 6, figs. 8–14.
1999
Actinostreon gregareum
(J. Sowerby 1815)
—Ahmad: p. 15, pl. 6, fig. 3.
2002
Actinostreon gregareum
(J. Sowerby 1815)
—Gahr: p. 123, pl. 3, fig. 12.
2002
Actinostreon gregareum
(J. Sowerby, 1815)
—Sha, Smith & Fürsich: p. 433, figs. 6, 7.1–7.14.
2005
Actinostreon solitarium
(J. Sowerby, 1824)
—Scholz: p. 26, pl.4, figs. 4–7.
2006
Actinostreon
gregareum—Hicks: 36.
2006
Actinostreon gregareum
(J. Sowerby, 1816)
—Richardt: 9, 18.
2011
Actinostreon solitarium
(J. de C. Sowerby)—Kiessling
et al
.: p. 209, fig. 13G.
Lectotype
(not seen)
.
Ostrea gregarea
J. de Sowerby, 1815: p. 19, pl. 111, fig. 3; subsequent designation by
Arkell 1933
: p. 185, pl. 22, fig. 5, BM. 44120a (NHMUK). Westbrook near Bromham, Wiltshire,
England
, Berkshire Oolite Series?, Coral rag, Oxfordian, Upper Jurassic.
Material
. More than 1000, mostly articulated specimens, including numerous juvenile specimens, from the Banné Marls of the Reuchenette Formation of Vâ Tche Tchâ near Courtedoux (Ajoie,
Switzerland
), Lower Kimmeridgian (Appendix,
Table 8
).
Description
. Shape, size—LV slightly larger and more inflated than RV; shape largely influenced by attachment size; rather undisturbed growth broadly curved with posteroventral branchitellum; otherwise round, oval, elongated, trigonal to sickle-shaped; umbones small, acute, slightly recurved; opisthogyrate, rarely prosogyrate (e.g., Pl. 16.5a–b, d). Examined specimens between
1.4–7 cm
in height (Appendix,
Table 8
)
Sculpture—Attached portion of shell often with replicates of overgrown objects (Pls. 16.3a,b, 4; 17.1a, c, 4b; 18.1a, 2a,c, 4a,b). Detached shell margin plicate; plicae growth direction roughly antimarginal, initially often with wavy, later typically with chevron shaped cross section; number of plicae increasing by splitting and intercalation; number variable (ca. 5–35), usually more than 20; plicae become squamous ventrally.
Ligament area—Well developed, initially curved, prosodetic, later growing anteroventrally, bourrelets in LV thick, convex, in adults almost as wide as resilifer; bourrelets in RV less convex, resilifer less sunken, may become convex tending to alivincular-arcuate (see definition in
Carter
et al
. (2012)
(Pl. 17.3a–d, Pl. 18.6).
Internal shell characters—Umbonal cavity small to absent. Adductor scar large, weakly raised ventrally, position slightly posterodorsal. Quenstedt muscle scar present in both valves, but rarely observable (Pl. 17.3b–c). Chomata present in all (eco)phenotypes, straight
type
, rather small (length between
0.3–0.6 mm
, width
0.09–0.3 mm
) and faint, on anterior and posterior dorsal shell margin, occasionally reaching further ventral than adductor scar, especially in juveniles (Pl. 17.4a).
Microstructure—Both valves with light-weight shell architecture; outermost prismatic shell layer not seen in either valve (eroded?); visible (non-chambered) outer-middle layers homogeneous “mosaic” to complex cross foliated (
ca.
500 µm thick); middle-inner layers with many small and medium large chambers, small chambers especially below rib crests, convex or biconvex in cross-section; chambers typically empty (or filled diagenetically with sparry cement), mocret absent or very rare (Pl. 22), chamber walls predominantly regular foliated, walls of void chambers often collapsed.
Prodissoconch, juvenile—Prodissoconch and earliest postlarval shell unknown (but see Pl. 19.4a–d). Small juveniles tend to have a stronger coiled umbo than adults (Pl. 18.4a–b, 5). The PAM of juveniles is oval (Pl. 18.3b); however, it rotates during ontogeny so that the anterior margin of the juvenile PAM becomes the adult dorsal adductor margin.
Paleoecology
.
Actinostreon gregareum
is typical of the marls and marly limestones of the Banné Marls (Ajoie,
Switzerland
) where specimens are often found articulated.
As
its name suggests, the species is gregarious, occasionally forming aggregates of dozens of specimens (Pls. 16.2a,b; 17.2a,b; 19.2a–d) (compare with the often solitary growth of the ecomorph “
A. solitarium
”). Individuals or small clusters often settle on large bivalve and gastropod shells. Elongate morphotypes are commonly attached to the spines of the gastropod
Harpagodes
or to the delicate stems (Pl. 16.3a,b; Pl. 17.4a,b) and thalli of
Goniolina
(calcareous algae) (Pls. 17.4; 18.1–3) (compare also
Pugaczewska 1971
, pl. 6, figs. 2a,b, 8a,b; for specimens settling on spines of sea urchins).
Present sedimentary and biogenic evidence suggests that
A. gregareum
thrived in relatively calm subtidal environments.
Arkell (1933, p. 184)
associated the species with coral reef settings (the
Trigonia hudlestoni
Limestones, Corallian
, Upper Oxfordian,
England
).
Fürsich (1977)
and
Sha
et al.
(2002)
reported high-energy conditions as the favoured environment. All settings from which the species has been described indicate fully marine conditions.
Occurrence
. In
Switzerland
, in the Lower Kimmeridgian Vabenau and Banné Members of the Reuchenette Formation, Bathonian–Tithonian of Central and Eastern Europe, Toarcian–Kimmeridgian of
Spain
, Tithonian of
Czech Republic
, Bajocian–Kimmeridgian of
Israel
, Oxfordian–Kimmeridgian of Arabia, Toarcian–Kimmeridgian of East Africa, Bajocian–Bathonian of
Iran
, Bajocian of
Australia
, Sinemurian–Aalenian of
Chile
, Bathonian–Oxfordian of
India
and
China
, Oxfordian–Kimmeridgian of
Burma
, Upper Jurassic of
Japan
(see
Sha
et al.
2002
, p. 435).
Comparisons
.
Actinostreon gregareum
is remarkably polymorphic even within the rather calm paleoenvironments of the Banné Marls. Because of its many transitional forms with populations described from more turbulent regimes, it is virtually impossible to separate the numerous alleged morphospecies described by
Pugaczewska (1971)
and previous authors.
The present approach largely agrees with the assessments and extensive synonymies given by
Aberhan (1994)
,
Cox (1952)
,
Gahr (2002)
,
Jaitly
et al.
(1995)
,
Sha
et al.
(2002)
, and
Siewert (1972)
. However, this makes
A. gregareum
a stratigraphically suspiciously wide-ranging species which still requires corroboration. The following list briefly discusses presumably distinct species in alphabetic order and with more doubtful cases towards the end.
Actinostreon marshii
(J. Sowerby, 1814)
(p. 103, pl. 48)—The species was first described from the Upper Cornbrash (Bathonian) in the neighbourhood of Felmersham near Bedford (Bedfordshire,
England
), but is also known from the Bajocian to Oxfordian in Europe (Pl. 19.3–4 for specimens of the Callovian of
Lithuania
) and from the Upper Bathonian to the Kimmeridgian of
India
(see
Cox 1952
, for synonymy and occurrence).
The species is characterized by few (7 or 8) strongly developed plicae and reaches a larger adult size with thicker shells than
A. gregareum
(Pl. 19.3). Adult specimens seem to lack chomata. The figured small specimen from
Lithuania
also lacks them (Pl. 19.4a–d) but this should be tested for juvenile shells in general. Usually the species does not form clusters, but exceptions are known, e.g., in the Oxfordian of the Vaches Noires (Normandy,
France
) (Fürsich, pers. comm. 2014). It occurs in relatively calm and, judged by its common association with ammonites, also deeper paleoenvironments.
Actinostreon namtuensis
(
Reed, 1936
)
(p. 9, pl. 1, fig. 1, 1a–b)—The species was originally described as
Lopha asellus
Merian
var.
namtuensis
from the Bathonian of
Burma
.
Sha
et al.
(2002)
considered it a synonym of
A. gregareum
. However, unlike
A. gregareum
, this species has a non-curved shell (despite a small attachment area) and develops more than 30 plications which are much finer than in
A. gregareum
.
?
Actinostreon arietis
(
Schäfle, 1929
)
(p. 63, pl. 6, figs. 2–3)—The species was originally described from the Lower Sinemurian (
Arietites
Limestone
) of Vaihingen (Stuttgart,
Germany
). The only figured specimen is the
holotype
which lacks the umbo and ventral shell portions. The remaining shell (
ca.
6.6 cm
high) is not curved and shows about 12 coarse plications (
Schäfle 1929
). Internal features and microstructures are unknown. In the light of the poor remains of the species, Schäfle’s allusion to the essentially crescentic genus
Arctostrea
from the Lower Cretaceous is incomprehensible.
?
Actinostreon erucum
(
Defrance, 1821
)
(p. 31)—
Defrance (1821)
introduced the name as
Ostrea eruca
without figure and information about the origin of the
type
material in his oyster chapter of the Dictionaire Scientifique Naturelle. The species is known from the Upper Callovian to Lower Oxfordian of the “falaise du Calvados” (Normandie,
France
) (
Bigot 1893
,
1904
;
Raspail 1901
, pl. 11, fig. 8).
Bigot (1893
, p. 136, pl. 2, figs. 4–6; 1904, Palaeontologia universalis, 73, 73a) figured the
type
material of
Defrance (1821)
and supposed Patrie (= Le Mesnil-Patry?) close to Villers-sur-Mer as the most likely
type
locality. The species was suggested by
Cox (1952, p. 105)
as a replacement name for
Ostrea hastellata
(
Schlotheim, 1820
)
[itself an invalid short form for
Ostracites cristahastellatus
Schlotheim, 1820
].
The species is narrowly sickle-shaped without being attached to a cylindrical object, thin-shelled, and the central area lacks plicae. This species was attributed to several other oyster genera such as
Arctostrea
or
Rastellum
(
Cox, 1952, p. 103
–
106
). In fact, the shape and plicae pattern are more reminiscent of the
type
species of Upper Cretaceous
Agerostrea
(Flemingostreinae)
which is a compact foliated genus (
Malchus, 1990, p. 160, pl. 15, fig. 8
) (see also,
Klinger & Malchus, 2008
;
Stenzel, 1971
, fig. J133). However, there are no further characters available for a sound assessment.
?
Actinostreon pulligerum
(Goldfuss, 1833)
(p. 5, pl. 72, fig. 11a–c)—The
type
material, from the Upper Kimmeridgian Corallian facies of Nattheim (Swabian Alb,
Germany
), compares well with a juvenile, round variation of
A. gregareum
,
attached to a small object (Pl. 16,
Figs. 5-6
) (see also
Arkell, 1933
, p. 186). Unfortunately, little else is known about this species (
Sha
et al.
2002
, p. 436).
?
Ambigostrea boucaudensis
(Choffat)
(manuscript name of the unpublished 3rd volume of Choffat’s monograph; according to Fürsich & Werner, 1988, p. 103)—According to
Malchus (1990, p. 68–70)
, the
Geological
Museum in Lisbon (
Portugal
) holds some specimens (nrs.
2593–2598
, 2600) from the Kimmeridgian of the Lusitanian Basin which were originally labelled as “
O
.
”
pulligera
var.
boucaudensis
Choffat. Unlike
typical
Actinostreon
species, this apparently undescribed variant or species is essentially compact foliated, develops nodular plicae, shows plenty of small but well developed relict chomata on its dorsal flanks, and has an ostreoid adductor scar.
Malchus (1990)
hypothesized that “
O
.”
pulligera
sensu Choffat
could be the earliest representative of his newly established genus
Ambigostrea
(
Malchus 1990, p. 85
).
Small straight chomata and an ostreoid adductor scar are also present on the original figure of Goldfuss (pl. 72, fig. 11c) which may suggest that both Choffat’s and Goldfuss’ specimens belong to
Ambigostrea
rather than
Actinostreon
.
?
Rastellum rusticum
(
Defrance, 1821
)
(p. 31)—The
types
of
Ostrea rustica
Defrance, 1821
, are from the Middle Callovian of Gâprée (Basse-Normandie, Department Orne,
France
) (
Bigot, 1904, Palaeontologia universalis, 72, 72a, figs. C.1–3, P.1–3
) (Fig. 21.1–2). The species is identical with
Ostrea amata
d’Orbigny, 1850
(
Bigot 1904
, p. 72a) and is morphologically similar to
A. gregareum
.
Main differences are a narrower shape, a thinner shell and the larger number of plicae (30–50), covering the whole shell including the umbonal area, absence of chomata, and the more posterodorsally situated oval adductor scar (Fig. 21.3–7). The shell was chambered as indicated by a collapsed shell layer on the inner (depositional) surface of a specimen from Villers-sur-Mer,
France
(Calvados, Middle Oxfordian,
plicatilis
Zone) (FPJ-collection, nr. 5369; Fig. 21.5–6) and Liesberg,
Switzerland
(Middle Callovian,
coronatum
Zone
) (FPJ, nr. 5367). This
type
of breakage is typical of specimens with larger (hollow) shell chambers.