Recent thecideide brachiopods (Thecideida, Thecideoidea) from northern Sulawesi (Indonesia) with discovery of a new Thecidellina species (Thecidellinidae)
Author
Simon, Eric
Author
Lüter, Carsten
Author
Logan, Alan
Author
Mottequin, Bernard
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-12-03
4526
4
481
515
journal article
27876
10.11646/zootaxa.4526.4.4
65c38733-a538-46c5-a323-af23c50c9adf
1175-5326
2611832
2AEE5959-7D13-4301-B7C8-D8A4D92CC751
Ospreyella mutiara
Simon & Hoffmann, 2013
Text-Fig. 2; Pl. 7, Figs. 3a–d, 4a–f
2013
Ospreyella mutiara
: Simon & Hoffmann
, pp. 412–424, text-fig. 4, pl. 3, figs. 1–8, pl. 4., figs. 1–10, pl. 5, figs. 1–5, pl. 6, figs. 1–8, pl. 7, figs. 1–6.
2016
Ospreyella mutiara
: Simon
et al.
, p. 5.
Material
. Available specimens were collected in the shipwreck from sieved sediment or attached on oyster shells and preserved in ethanol for a future DNA study. This species is quite scarce at this station and the state of preservation is not excellent. The dried material is represented by ten individuals: eight articulated shells, one dorsal valve and two ventral valves. Material preserved in ethanol represents six specimens supposed to be alive when collected and are reserved for future DNA analyses.
Description.
The material collected in Lembeh corresponds completely to the diagnosis and detailed description given for this species in 2013 by Simon & Hoffmann (pp. 412–415). The material from the Strait of Lembeh is thus similar to the material that was found in Donggala in the Strait of Makassar. The only other known possible
Ospreyella
species could be
O. palauensis
Logan, 2008
.
However, the specific characters of the latter species are not observed in
O. mutiara
from Lembeh, which has a median depression strongly tuberculate in its anterior part, a narrow ventral surface of the thick median ramus filled with secondary material, thick ramuli as wide as ramus filled with secondary material and frilled, minor interbrachial lobes asymmetrical and subparallel. A complete comparison between
O. mutiara
and
O. palauensis
can be found in
Simon and Hoffmann (2013, tab. 4, p. 423)
.
Ontogeny and molecular analyses.
The developments of the shell and of the lophophore have been described, discussed and illustrated in detail by
Simon & Hoffmann (2013, pp. 427–428, pl. 6, figs. 1–8, pl. 7, figs. 1–6)
. In the same paper (p. 428, text-fig. 4) results of a molecular analyze of 18S rDNA has been published for
O. mutiara
that confirmed the Indo-Pacific distribution for the genus and the validity of the specific status of this species.