Taxonomic applications of the esophageal flapper valve in Bairdoppilata and Glyptobairdia (Bairdiidae, Ostracoda), with comments on anatomy, ontogeny, and geography
Author
Maddocks, Rosalie F.
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-08-17
5175
3
301
342
journal article
124035
10.11646/zootaxa.5175.3.1
509d2bb8-bdff-4757-b45a-5d0cbccc31b4
1175-5326
7003585
44FB9C3D-3188-4BFB-BDB8-C1324729A396
Bairdoppilata hirsuta
(
Brady, 1880
)
(
Figure 11
)
1880
Bairdia hirsuta
Brady
,
n. sp.
: 51, pl. 4, figs. 4, 5.
1976
Bairdia hirsuta
Brady.
—Puri & Hulings, p. 265, pl. 4, figs. 4, 5.
Not
1969
Bairdoppilata
(
Bairdoppilata
?)
hirsuta
(Brady)
.—Maddocks, p. 79, fig. 43A–I, pl. 2, figs. 1, 2.
Not
1973
Bairdoppilata hirsuta
(Brady)
.—Maddocks, p. 42, figs. 5B–G, 6A–E [=
B. hirsutella
,
n. sp.
, see below].
Not
2009
Bairdoppilata
?
hirsuta
(Brady)
.—Maddocks
et al
., Checklist, p. 888.
Material Examined:
None.
Taxonomic Remarks:
The
species is firmly identified only from the type locality.
The
lectotype
selected by
Puri & Hulings (1976)
is a somewhat nondescript
RV
from
Challenger Station
300, near
Juan Fernandez Island
in the
Southeast Pacific
(
33
o
44’0”S
,
78
o
10’0” W
, depth 1375 fathoms). They reported the dimensions as:
RVL
1.46 mm
, RVH
0.90 mm
(see
Fig. 11
). Supplemental bairdoppilatan dentition was not mentioned and is not visible in their illustration. The calcified inner lamella (infold) of the
lectotype
is somewhat narrow, and it may be an instar. The soft parts are unknown. Redescription of a larger, preferably living population from this locality will be needed to recognize this species, and all records of
B. hirsuta
at other localities require re-examination
.
FIGURE 11.
Bairdoppilata hirsutella
Maddocks
,
n. sp.
H:L scatter plot for 4 specimens from Eltanin station 25: Holotype specimen 634M (USNM 139891), and paratype specimens 635F (USNM 139892), 636W, and 689J (USNM 139894). Also plotted here are specimen 468F (SUM 121353), which was collected in the Gulf of Mexico and is of uncertain species identity, and the Lectotype RV of
Bairdia hirsuta
Brady.
Specimens from Eltanin station 25, in the East Pacific were identified as
B. hirsuta
by
Maddocks (1973)
, but that identification is dubious. For clarity of communication, a new name,
B. hirsutella
Maddocks
,
n. sp.
, is proposed below for that Eltanin population.
Maddocks (1969)
described and illustrated
two adult
females as
B. (B.?)
hirsuta
(specimen 468F,
USNM 121353
; specimen 469F,
USNM 121355
; both from the
Gulf
of
Mexico
,
28
o
15’N
,
87
o
02’W
, depth
1000 m
).
Their
dimensions agree well with the population described from
Eltanin station
25 (
Fig. 12
), but without males a firm identification is difficult
.
Maddocks (1969)
also reported subfossil valves from numerous
Albatross
and
Anton Bruun
stations, but those identifications are even less plausible.
Brandão (2008)
demonstrated that the diversity of bairdioids has been severely underestimated in the Southern Ocean and in deeper water.