Revision of northeast Pacific Paleogene cypraeoidean gastropods, including recognition of three new species: implications for paleobiogeographic distribution and faunal turnover
Author
Groves, Lindsey
Author
Squires, Richard L.
text
PaleoBios
2023
2023-08-10
40
10
1
52
http://dx.doi.org/10.5070/p9401057774
journal article
10.5070/P9401057774
0031-0298
10913295
11600574-2B0E-4C13-BC08-A3A5EF9EE562
NUCLEOLARIA COWLITZIANA
GROVES, 1994
A
FIGS. 4A–C
Nucleolaria cowlitziana
Groves, 1994a
, p. 247
–248, figs. 6, 7.
Nesbitt, 1995
. p. 1066.
Groves, 1997
. p. 7.
Groves, 2000
. p. 120.
Dolin and Lozouet, 2004
. p. 73.
Lorenz, 2017
. p. 220.
Lorenz, 2018
. p. 664, pl. 328, fig. 5.
Jenneria cowlitziana
(Groves)
.
Fehse, 2001
. p. 37.
Holotype
and Type Locality
—
UCMP 39837
(
Figs. 4A–C
), length
27.2 mm
, width
17.3 mm
, height
11.3 mm
.
UCMP
Locality
D-8040,
Cowlitz Formation
, south-central
Lewis County
,
Washington
.
Occurrence—
Middle to
upper Eocene
(“Tejon Stage”), south-central
Lewis County
,
Washington
.
Etymology—
Originally named for the Eocene Cowlitz Formation, Lewis County, southwest
Washington
.
Description—
Shell of size medium size. Shape ovoid. Spire covered. Maximum height slightly posterior of midpoint. Dorsal groove faint; dorsal nodules smooth, circular, connected by fine threads that extend onto basal surface and form prominent denticulation. Marginal cal- lus slight. Aperture curved slightly posteriorly toward columella. Denticulation prominent with smooth inter- stices, labial lip with 19 teeth, and columellar lip with 18 teeth. Fossula with strong denticulation. Anterior and posterior canals prominently lengthened by terminal teeth. (
Groves 1994a
: p. 247).
Remarks—
The
holotype
of this Cowlitz Formation species is the only known record of this genus in the eastern Pacific.
Fehse (2001
: pp. 18, 37) assigned
N. cowlitziana
erroneously to the ovulid genus
Jenneria
Jousseaume, 1884
, but later, following an examination of the
holotype
, Fehse acknowledged his error (personal communication,
July 2004
).
Dolin and Lozouet (2004
: p. 73) inexplicably questioned the provenance of this specimen and compared it to the living species
N. nucleus
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
. In the same publication they described
Nucleolaria bezoyensis
and mistakenly claimed that their species (now reassigned to the genus
Naria
by
Lorenz, 2017
) was the earliest record of
Nucleolaria
.
However,
N. cowlitziana
remains the earliest record of the genus and its provenance is certain.
This earliest known occurrence of
Nucleolaria
in the NEP region is an enigma. It is likely indicative of an eastward-directed faunistic influx during the Paleogene between the warm waters of the central Pacific Ocean and the NEP region.
Nucleolaria
today is a tropical Indo-Pacific genus. Like most other extant cypraeoideans, its larvae are planktonic (
Groves 1994a
).
Emerson and Chaney (1995)
documented 15 species of Indo-Pacific cypraeid species from the eastern Pacific, three of which are based on single specimens.
Lorenz (2017)
recog- nized only a single Indo-Pacific species established in the eastern Pacific.
Lindberg et al. (1980)
documented the only other fossil Indo-Pacific species [
Naria cernica
(G.B. Sowerby
II,1870
)
] in the eastern Pacific from the Pleistocene of Isla de Guadalupe,
Baja California
,
México
.