Brachiopods from the Middle Ordovician Shihtzupu Formation of Yunnan Province, China
Author
Zhan, Renbin
Author
Jin, Jisuo
text
Acta Palaeontologica Polonica
2005
50
2
365
393
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.13620317
1732-2421
13620317
Leptestiina veturna
sp. nov.
Figs. 12N
,
13A–I
;
Table 13
.
Derivation of name
: From the Latin
veturnus
, old, referring to the lowest known range of the genus represented by the new species.
Holotype
:
NIGP 139147
(
Fig. 13C
), ventral internal mould.
Type locality
:
Shizigou Valley
near the
Weixin County town
,
Yunnan Province
.
Type horizon
: Upper part of Shihtzupu Formation.
Material
.—Thirteen ventral internal and four external, two dorsal internal and nine external moulds. Collection AFI1680.
Diagnosis
.—Small, weakly transverse, strongly concavoconvex shells of
Leptestiina
, with relatively sparse accentuated costae.
Description
.—Shell small, concavoconvex, subsemicircular to subcircular; maximum width along hinge line. Cardinal extremities acute to rounded. Anterior commissure rectimarginate. Ventral valve about three−quarters as long as wide, strongly convex, deepest in central part; visceral area more convex than marginal area of shell; interarea high, about one−eighth length of shell, apsacline with planar or slightly curved surface; delthyrium relatively wide, covered by weakly arched pseudodeltidium in its posterior two−thirds (
Fig. 13C
2
). Dorsal valve about three−fifths as long as wide, deeply concave, with greatest concavity at junction between visceral area and geniculation; interarea low, shorter than one−tenth length of shell, anacline; notothyrium narrow, short, covered by arched chilidium (
Fig. 13H
2
). Unequal parvicostellae; 7–9 accentuated costae, with finer costellae inserting three times; about 9–11 fine costellae between two adjacent costae at shell anterior margin. Concentric fila evenly spaced, about 15–16 per mm.
Teeth small, wedge−shaped; dental plates short, high, subparallel, continuous with anterior bounding ridge of muscle field. Muscle field subtriangular to subpentagonal, about one−fifth length and width of shell, elevated anteriorly; adductor scars small, narrow, mainly in posteromedial part of muscle field, separated from diductor scars by pair of thin plates in some shells (
Fig. 13D
); diductor scars much larger, subcircular, surrounding adductor scars laterally and anteriorly. Mantle canal system saccate; vascula media originating from anterior ends of diductor scars, with long, straight, weakly divergent main trunks. Bema relatively large, well−developed; dorsal platform marked by weak, discrete septules.
Discussion
.—The convexity of ventral valves has a certain degree of variation: the visceral area is usually much more convex than the shell marginal area, giving the valve a galeate shape (e.g.,
Fig. 13E
1
), but some shells are almost evenly convex (
Figs. 12N
,
13C
1
).
There are seven species assigned to
Leptestiina
, ranging from early Caradocian to mid−Ashgillian (
Cocks and Rong 1989
,
2000
). In
China
, previously known forms of the genus are associated with the
Foliomena
fauna in the upper Pingliang (upper Caradocian) and the Linhsiang (lower Ashgillian) formations (
Fu 1982
; Rong et al. 1994). The new species of late Darriwilian age is probably the oldest known of the genus. In comparison, the
type
species,
L. prantli
Havlíček, 1952
from the Králův Dvůr Formation (middle Ashgillian) of
Bohemia
, can be distinguished by its more transverse shell, more numerous costae, and lower shell convexity.
Leptestiina
cf.
prantli
from the Linhsiang Formation of western Guizhou Province (Rong et al. 1994) has a strongly transverse shell.