Systematics of the family Carditidae (Bivalvia: Archiheterodonta) in the Cenozoic of Argentina
Author
Pérez, Damián E.
Author
Del Río, Claudia J.
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-10-24
4338
1
51
84
journal article
31761
10.11646/zootaxa.4338.1.3
26f58d19-4735-470a-a8c7-f9b5cea8a1d6
1175-5326
1035558
398F004C-B562-415B-916D-DBA32EF0F88E
Genus
Darwinicardia
new genus
Type
species.
Cardita patagonica
G. B.
Sowerby I, 1846
(pl. 2, fig. 17).
San Julián
,
Monte León
,
Carmen Silva
and
Barranca Final
formations,
upper Oligocene–upper Miocene
,
Argentina
.
Diagnosis.
Carditid with subtriangular outline and recurved umbo. Posterior area defined by a change in convexity starting from the sixth rib. Right valve hinge with ventral edge ‘V’-inverted shaped. Right anterior tooth curved and left anterior tooth broad. External sculpture of 22 to 26 tripartite and high radial ribs with subtriangular transverse section covered with small subcircular nodes. Radial rib tips raising above crenulations on internal view.
Included species.
Darwinicardia angusticostata
(
Deshayes, 1824
)
(Eocene, Paris Basin, France).
Derivation of name.
The name honours Charles Darwin, who collected the first specimen of the type species, followed by the suffix ‘-
cardia
’, that means ‘heart’ (in reference to its outline when viewed anteriorly); the suffix is often used for carditid genera.
Remarks.
This new genus is placed along with the members of the alticostate group of carditids (
Harris 1919
;
Heaslip 1968
), which are characterized by the presence of tripartite radial ribs usually covered with nodes, scales or tubercles and narrow hinges.
Darwinicardia
resembles
Glyptoactis
Stewart, 1930
(type species
Venericardia hadra
Dall, 1903
, Miocene of Florida, USA) (
Heaslip 1968: pl. 27–29
) by having a similar outline and sculpture. However,
Darwinicardia
has a stronger and rectangular left anterior tooth, higher radial ribs with weaker paracostal ribs separated by wider intercostal spaces with a subtriangular transverse section.
Darwinicardia
differs from
Venericardia
Lamarck, 1801
by its subtriangular outline, umbo more convex and recurved, a larger lunule, a smaller number of higher radial ribs with weaker paracostal ribs separated by wider intercostal spaces and covered by smaller comarginal nodes.
The shell outline and external sculpture of
Darwinicardia
resemble those of
Fasciculicardia
Maxwell, 1969
(type species
Venericardia subintermedia
Suter, 1917
: lower–middle Miocene of New Zealand) (
Maxwell 1969: pl. 23, fig. g
) but the new genus has a right anterior tooth with a very convex anterior side, a stronger left anterior tooth, a larger lunule and a smaller number of radial ribs, standing out from crenulations on internal view.
Darwinicardia
can be distinguished from
Cardites
Link, 1807
(type species
Chama antiquata
Linnaeus, 1758
; Miocene–Recent of Europe and North Africa) by having a right anterior tooth, higher tripartite radial ribs standing above crenulations on internal view and separated by wider intercostal spaces.
Darwinicardia
differs from
Cardiocardita
Anton, 1839
(type species
Cardita ajar
Bruguière, 1792
; Recent, West Africa) by having a more clearly subtriangular outline, umbo more convex and recurved, a larger lunule, a right valve hinge with ‘V’- shaped ventral edge, and higher radial ribs with weaker paracostal ribs separated by wider intercostal spaces.
We also include in this new genus the species
Venericardia angusticostata
Deshayes, 1825
(=
V. granulata
Defrance, 1828
) (Eocene, Paris Basin,
France
).
Pacaud & Le Renard (1995)
placed the species in
Venericardia
. However, the subtriangular outline, convex umbo, the posterior area defined by a change in convexity starting from the sixth rib, the right valve hinge with a ‘V’- shaped ventral edge, the strong and rectangular left anterior tooth and the 22 to 23 tripartite and high radial ribs covered by small subcircular nodes and intercostal spaces with transverse section places this species in the new genus
Darwinicardia
.