Bivalves from the latest Jurassic-earliest Cretaceous hydrocarbon seep carbonates from central Spitsbergen, Svalbard
Author
Hryniewicz, Krzysztof
krzysztof.hryniewicz@nhm.uio.no
Author
Little, Crispin T. S.
earctsl@leeds.ac.uk
Author
Nakrem, Hans Arne
krzysztof.hryniewicz@nhm.uio.no
text
Zootaxa
2014
2014-09-02
3859
1
1
66
journal article
4900
10.11646/zootaxa.3859.1.1
d866af6f-cbcd-47f4-a4f3-1499c1789ae3
1175-5326
4930112
24FCAAE1-AB7C-4FAD-8698-D0C9F12400EC
Cretaxinus hurumi
sp. nov.
(
Figures 13 K–N
,
15
,
16 A–G
)
2011
Thyasira
sp.
—Hammer
et al.
, fig. 7a–c, tab. 2.
Etymology.
After Jørn H. Hurum, leader of 2004–2012
Svalbard
expeditions of the Natural History Museum, University of Oslo.
Type
locality.
Seep 9, Knorringfjellet, Spitsbergen,
78°18’49.9”N
16°10’58.9”E
.
Type mterial.
Holotype
:
PMO 217.277
; an internal mould with shell partially preserved, showing a triangular outline, external ornament, a sulcated posterior margin and a thick, short, external ligament
.
Paratypes
:
PMO 217.172
; an almost complete internal mould showing outline and anterior adductor muscle scar
.
PMO 217.175
; a fragment of an internal mould and silicone rubber cast showing posterior adductor muscle scar and posterior pedal retractor. The silicone rubber cast shows the cardinal area with an elongated resilifer
.
PMO 217.540
; complete internal mould showing the triangular outline, well impressed rounded posterior adductor muscle scar and deep escutcheon
.
PMO 225.128
; an almost complete internal mould showing anterior adductor muscle scar and crosssection through the external ligament and ligament nymphs
.
PMO 225.136
; an internal mould showing very weak anterior adductor muscle scar
.
Material examined.
56 specimens
, all articulated or semi-articulated internal moulds with variable amounts of shell preserved. See Appendix 1 for list of specimens.
Dimensions.
23–56.5 mm
in length,
12.6–50 mm
in height,
19–39 mm
in width. See
Figure 17 A–D
and Appendix 2K for details.
Diagnosis.
As for the genus.
Description.
Shell large, subtriangular in outline, up to
56.5 mm
long,
50 mm
high, and
39 mm
wide. Average H/L ratio ≈ 0.85, W/L ≈ 0.75, and W/H ≈ 0.88. Shell less than
0.5 mm
thick, covered with commarginal growth lines. Umbonal angle usually larger among smaller specimens, which have concave anterodorsal and posterodorsal margins. Beaks incurved, prosogyrate, not prominent, positioned closer towards the anterior, with average Pl/L ≈ 0.67. Umbonal angle slightly acute. Lunule large, deep, heart-shaped. Anterior margin tightly rounded, more angular in larger specimens. Ventral margin curved, with curvature deepest close to mid-line in smaller specimens, progressively displaced towards posterior during growth. Curvature shows some intraspecific variation, from deep and prominent, to shallow and gentle. Posterior extremity weakly pointed, posterodorsal margin sloping, with very weak sulcus. Smaller specimens usually have slightly concave posterodorsal margin, which is more straight in larger specimens. Escutcheon large and deep. Ligament external, thick, short, occupying 1/3 of escutcheon. Hinge plate narrow. Cardinal area with single, elongate groove, probably representing a ligament groove. Lateral dentition not observed. Anterior adductor muscle scar very weak and small, elongated along pallial line, with straight ventral margin and irregular dorsal margin; well impressed in anterior part, fading towards posterior so length of anterior adductor muscle scar cannot be fully ascertained. Anterior pedal retractor scar small and weak, circular, separated from the anterior adductor muscle scar by narrow margin, visible in
one specimen
only. Posterior adductor muscle scar larger than anterior adductor muscle scar, circular, deeply impressed, displaced towards hinge plate. Posterior pedal retractor small, circular, approximately same size as anterior pedal retractor scar; positioned close to hinge plate and separated from posterior adductor muscle scar by narrow distance. Pallial line entire, weak, marked by pallial muscle scars in some specimens. Internal shell surface covered with fine radial ornament, probably representing traces of descending pallial muscles.
Remarks.
Cretaxinus hurumi
gen. et sp. nov.
is the oldest thyasirid species known to date. The slightly younger Valanginian to Hauterivian thyasirid is
Lucina
?
rouyana
d’Orbigny, 1844, from the shelf deposits of Europe and possible seep sites of Grodziszcze beds in the Carpathians (
Ascher 1906
, p. 164, pl. XIV, fig. 9a–c;
Kiel
et al
. 2008a
;
Kaim
et al
. 2013
), which has more of a typical
Thyasira
shape. The Albian
Lucina
?
sculpta
Phillips, 1829
, from Southern
England
(
Woods 1907
, p. 153, pl. 24, fig. 7–9) has a very distinct shape reminiscent of the genus
Axinus
Sowerby, 1821
(
Taylor
et al.
2007
).
Thyasira tanabei
Kiel, Amano & Jenkins, 2008
(a) is known from Albian to Campanian hydrocarbon seeps of
Hokkaido
,
Japan
.
Thyasira tanabei
has a large anterior adductor muscle scar, unlike
C. hurumi
, but the lack of information about the ligament of
T. tanabei
makes more detailed comparison difficult.
Thyasira
sp.
from the Cenomanian Kanajirasawa seep of
Hokkaido
(
Kiel
et al.
2008a
) is known from a single, partially preserved specimen only and, therefore, is also difficult to compare to
C. hurumi
. Various Campanian thyasirid species from the Western Interior Seaway (
Kauffman 1967
) differ in shape from
C. hurumi
, having flattened posterior areas, narrow escutcheons, deeper sulci and more ovate shapes, reminiscent of Recent
Thyasira
species.
Occurrence.
Seep
9 (uppermost Ryazanian),
Slottsmøya Member
,
Svalbard
(
Tab. 1
).
Known
only from the
type
locality
.
Palaeoecology.
We infer that
Cretaxinus hurumi
was a chemosymbiotic and possibly seep-restricted Mesozoic thyasirid. This is supported by the large shell size of
C. hurumi
. Among modern thyasirids chemosymbiosis is present mainly in species with two gill demibranchs (
Dufour 2005
) and these usually have large shells, up to around
10 mm
for the genera
Axinus
,
Thyasira
and
Parathyasira
, but can reach up to
110 mm
in
Conchocele
(e.g.
Payne & Allen 1991
;
Kamenev
et al.
2001
;
Oliver & Killeen 2002
). Large shells provide enough space in the mantle cavity for large symbiont-bearing gills (
Taylor & Glover 2010
). In contrast, thyasirids with a single gill demibranch are usually asymbiotic (
Dufour 2005
;
Taylor & Glover 2010
). These asymbiotic species are much smaller, with sizes of only a few millimeters (
Payne & Allen 1991
;
Oliver & Levin 2006
).
Cretaxinus hurumi
shells are up to
56.5 mm
long, and this is very large for the family, which strongly suggests the species had hypertrophied gills suitable for symbiosis with chemoautotrophic bacteria. Smaller chemosymbiotic thyasirids (≈
10 mm
in length) are known from seep environments (e.g.
Dando
et al.
2004
), but also occur in non-seep settings with high redox potential, such as organic-rich sediments in fjords (
Dando & Spiro 1993
), pulpmill effluents (
Dando & Southward 1986
) and in the vicinity of offshore hydrocarbon production sites (
Oliver & Killeen 2002
). However, the only Recent thyasirid genus which attains sizes comparable to
C. hurumi
is
Conchocele
, and this is closely associated with seeps (Kamenev
et. al
2001;
Okutani 2002
; cf.
Weaver 1942
;
Coan
et al
. 2000
). Another line of evidence indicating that
C. hurumi
was both chemosymbiotic and seep-restricted comes from absence of the species in contemporary ‘normal’ marine sediments on
Svalbard
(e.g.
Sokolov & Bodylevsky 1931
;
Weir 1933
;
Birkenmajer
et al.
1982
), despite being relatively abundant in the hydrocarbon seeps (
Hammer
et al.
2011
).
Thyasirids are burrowers (e.g.
Dando & Southward 1986
;
Oliver & Killeen 2002
). Chemosymbiotic species dig into fine grained sediment to a depth a few times the length of the shell (
Pearson 1972
). In these burrows they use a vermiform foot to construct a three dimensional network of downward directed tunnels reaching up to 30 times the length of the shell, which serve as conduits for sulfide-rich pore waters from deeper interstitial levels (
Dando & Southward 1986
;
Zuschin
et al.
2001
;
Oliver & Killeen 2002
;
Dando
et al.
2004
;
Taylor & Glover 2010
). However, they are usually unable to tolerate high sulfide concentrations.
FIGURE 15.
Cretaxinus hurumi
gen. et sp. nov.
(A) Lateral view of left valve of articulated internal mould, showing broadly rounded ventral margin. (B–C) Detail of anterior margin showing weak and descending anterior adductor muscle scar fading posteriorly and its serrated dorsal margin. (D) Anterior view showing shape and size of lunule. (E) Dorsal view showing shape of the posterodorsal margin and escutcheon. (F–G) Cross-section through a ligament showing its thickness. (H) Lateral view of left valve of articulated internal mould with less rounded margin than specimen shown in (A). (I–J) Detail of a anterior margin showing weak anterior adductor muscle scar fading posteriorly. (K–L) Anterior view showing shape and size of the lunule, anterior adductor and pedal retractor muscle scars. (M) Dorsal view showing shape of the posterodorsal margin and escutcheon. (N) Lateral view of right valve internal mould. (O–P) Detail of anterior margin showing very weak anterior adductor muscle scar visible only at its anteriormost portion. (A–G) PMO 225.128, (H–M) PMO 217.172, (N–P) PMO 225.136. Scale bars 10 mm.
Chemosymbiotic thyasirids are also capable of feeding on photosynthetic organic matter if conditions for chemosynthesis become unfavourable (
Dando & Spiro 1993
).
Cretaxinus hurumi
was probably a relatively deep burrower, based on similar lines of evidence to the lucinid
Tehamatea rasmusseni
.
Order
Venerida
Gray, 1854