Decapod assemblage from the late Miocene (early-middle Messinian) of the Romagna Apennines nearby Brisighella, Emilia-Romagna (N Italy)
Author
Pasini, Giovanni
Author
Garassino, Alessandro
Author
Sami, Marco
text
Natural History Sciences
2019
2019-03-18
6
1
27
32
http://dx.doi.org/10.4081/nhs.2019.394
journal article
10.4081/nhs.2019.394
2385-0922
12523847
Medorippe ampla
Garassino, De Angeli, Gallo & Pasini, 2004
Fig. 2B
Medorippe ampla
Garassino, De Angeli, Gallo & Pasini, 2004: 260-262
, figs. 5, 6a, b.
Medorippe ampla
– De Angeli & Garassino 2006: 40. — De Angeli
et al.
2009: 174, fig. 6. —
Schweitzer
et al.
2010: 79
.
Material and measurements
: Two carapaces in dorsal view (
MSF
2301
–
lcxp:
14 mm
, wcxp:
15 mm
;
MSF
2317 – lcxp:
15 mm
, wcxp:
16 mm
).
Discussion
. Though both specimens are preserved as moulds of the interior, some main proxy characters of the carapace of
one specimen
(MSF 2317) allow us to assign them to
Medorippe
Manning & Holthuis, 1981
, in having a subhexagonal convex carapace; divergent anterolateral margins; sinuous posterior margin, slightly convex at the intestinal margin; dorsal regions well marked by grooves; deep cervical groove joining branchial grooves laterally; sinuous branchial grooves joining groove dividing urogastric from cardiac region; and well-developed hepatic regions. Moreover, the carapace is wider than long, the narrow front with two short lobes, the well-developed and elongate extraorbital teeth and the presence of (?granulate) carinae on hepatic, branchial, and supraorbital regions, are all peculiar characters that distinguish
Medorippe ampla
from the extant and fossil
type
species
M. lanata
, reported from the Pleistocene of
Sicily
(
Gemmellaro, 1914
) (Garassino
et al.
, 2004: 262). Based on these distinctive characters the studied specimens are confidently ascribed to
M. ampla
Garassino, De Angeli, Gallo & Pasini, 2004
.
Medorippe ampla
was previously reported from the late Miocene (Messinian) of Cocconato (Asti,
Piedmont
) and from the
Rio Popogna
(Livorno,
Tuscany
) (Garassino
et al.
, 2004;
De Angeli
et al.
, 2009).