New and revised species of the aulacopleurid trilobite Maurotarion from the Lower Devonian (Pragian) of Nevada
Author
Adrain, Jonathan M.
text
Zootaxa
2009
2215
1
23
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.189946
75d80a89-f756-44e2-b35a-069877012b4f
1175-5326
189946
CD9DA207-5FEF-4395-90C6-315431D4D957
Maurotarion
Alberti, 1969
=
Goniopleura
Hawle and Corda, 1847
(preoccupied, not replaced) =
Tricornotarion
Chatterton, 1971
=
Branisella
Přibyl and Vanėk, 1981
(preoccupied, not replaced)
Type
species.
Harpidella maura
,
Alberti, 1967
.
Other species.
See
Adrain and Chatterton (1995a
, p. 318), with the following additions and amendments:
Maurotarion chrysion
n. sp.
, Pragian, Wenban Limestone, Nevada,
USA
;
Otarion dongujumqinensis
Nan, 1976
, Lower Devonian of Inner
Mongolia
,
China
;
Forbesia euryceps
M’Coy, 1876
, Yan Yean Formation, Ludlow,
Australia
(see
Sandford [2000]
; =
Cyphaspis spryi
Gregory, 1901
, fide
Sandford [2000, p. 164]
);
M. fooi
n. sp.
, Pragian, Wenban Limestone, Nevada,
USA
;
Harpidella (Harpidella) hecate
Van
ĕk,
Vokáč, and Hörbinger, 1992
, Konĕprusy Limestone, Pragian,
Czech Republic
;
M. isaacsoni
Adrain and Edgecombe, 1996
, Belén Formation, Eifelian,
Bolivia
;
M. legrandi
Adrain and Edgecombe, 1996
, Belén Formation, Eifelian,
Bolivia
;
Phillipsia minuscula
Hall, 1876
, Schoharie
Grit
, Emsian, New York State,
USA
;
M. racheboeufi
Adrain and Edgecombe, 1996
, Icla Formation, Emsian,
Bolivia
;
M. richardsoni
Chatterton and Ludvigsen, 2004
, Jupiter Formation, Aeronian, Anticosti Island, Quebec,
Canada
;
M. wenbanense
n. sp.
, Pragian, Wenban Limestone, Nevada,
USA
.
Otarion pusillus
Liu, 1982
, is known from an internal mold of a single incomplete and distorted pygidium. It could possibly represent a species of
Maurotarion
.
Harpidella
(s.l.)
occidentalis
Owen, 1981
, was assigned to
Maurotarion
by
Adrain and Chatterton (1995a
, p. 318), but should be reassigned to
Harpidella
.
Cyphaspis australis
Ohern and Maynard, 1913
, from the Lower Devonian of Maryland,
USA
, may possibly represent a species of
Maurotarion
, but is known only from the original line drawing of a cranidium.
Harpidella (Harpidella) thomasi
Clarkson and Howells, 1981
, was assigned to
Maurotarion
by
Adrain and Chatterton (1995a)
, but its affinities are uncertain. The species is known from a single articulated specimen represented by counterpart molds (
Clarkson and Howells, 1981 pl. 79, figs. 1, 2
).
Clarkson and Howells (1981)
also assigned an isolated pygidium, but expressed doubt as to whether it belonged. The pygidium is very long, with at least five axial rings, a morphology unknown in
Maurotarion
and unusual for an otarionine in general, aside from younger derived species of
Otarion
Zenker, 1833
. The pygidium possibly represents a proetid, though given the uncertainty of the affinities of
thomasi
, assignment to that species cannot be ruled out on present evidence.
Harpidella (H.) thomasi
resembles species of
Maurotarion
in its apparently weakly inflated cranidium lacking dorsal sculpture and in its large eye and narrow librigenal field. However, it possesses a thoracic axial spine on the sixth segment, a feature definitively absent in every species of
Maurotarion
for which there is available evidence. Ordovician aulacopleurids typically have a thoracic axial spine (e.g.,
Adrain, 2005
; unpublished data). If loss of this spine is synapomorphic within
Maurotarion
, it is conceivable that some basal species could retain it.
Harpidella (H.) thomasi
is Aeronian in age, and the only older species of
Maurotarion
is the Rhuddanian
M. messieri
Adrain and Chatterton, 1995
a. Whether or not
M. messieri
possessed a spine is uncertain -
Adrain and Chatterton (1995a, fig. 9.16–9.18, 9.24, 9.25)
illustrated segments with long axial spines, but
M. messieri
occurs along with
H. tikkaneni
Adrain and Chatterton, 1995
a. All species of
Harpidella
s.s.
(sensu
Adrain and Chatterton, 1995a
) for which information is available possess such a spine, and the segments likely belong to
H. tikkaneni
.
Diagnosis:
See
Adrain and Chatterton (1995a
, p. 318).
Discussion:
Adrain and Chatterton’s (1995a) revised concept of
Maurotarion
has been followed in most subsequent studies (e.g.,
Curtis and Lane, 1997
;
Edgecombe and Fortey, 2000
;
Sandford, 2000
;
Chatterton and Ludvigsen, 2004
;
Rustán, 2008
).
With the taxa added herein, the Pragian becomes the stratigraphic stage with the highest
Maurotarion
species diversity, at nine. Four of these species, however, are very poorly known.
Harpidella neptis
Alberti, 1967
, from the “
princeps
” Limestone at Ghtira-Tal, northwest
Morocco
, is known from only two cranidia. It was assigned to
Otarion (Maurotarion)
by
Alberti (1969, pl. 36, figs. 9, 10)
. With so little information, it is not clear that the species is actually a representative of
Maurotarion
. In particular, it has very narrow interocular fixigenae, with the palpebral lobes nearly abutting the glabella. The palpebral lobes are also much smaller and narrower than in typical species of the genus, and do not protrude laterally to the widest point of divergence of the anterior facial sutures. In other respects it does resemble species of
Maurotarion
, such as in the possession of small L1 which do not significantly protrude from the lateral outline of the glabella, and a long, flat, anterior border. More material, particularly of sclerites in addition to the cranidium, would be required to adequately assess the affinity of the species.
Harpidella (Harpidella) distincta
Přibyl and Vanĕk, 1981
, from the Vinariče Limestone, and
H. (H.) tantula
Přibyl and Vanĕk, 1981
, from the Dvorce-Prokop Limestone, both Pragian of the Prague Basin,
Bohemia
,
Czech Republic
, were assigned to
Maurotarion
by
Adrain and Chatterton (1995a)
. The former is known from a single incomplete internal mold of a cranidium (
Přibyl and Vanĕk, 1981, pl. 7, fig. 10
), and the latter from five incomplete cranidia (
Přibyl and Vanĕk, 1981, pl. 7, figs. 1–5
). Přibyl and Vanĕk compared the species only with each other and with their new
H. (H.) kobayashii
(Emsian,
Czech Republic
), which is known from three fragmentary cranidia (
Přibyl and Vanĕk, 1981, pl. 7, figs. 11, 12, pl. 9, fig. 8
). These species are essentially uninterpretable beyond their probable status as ingroup
Maurotarion
.
Of the five non-Nevada species, only the late Lochkovian or earliest Pragian Bolivian
M. dereimsi
(Kozlowksi, 1923)
is reasonably well understood (see
Adrain and Edgecombe, 1996
, p. 424, pl. 52, figs. 1–3, 5–9).
Adrain and Edgecombe (1996)
argued that
M. dereimsi
formed a predominantly Malvinokaffric clade with their new species
M. racheboeufi
(Emsian,
Bolivia
) and
M. legrandi
(Eifelian,
Bolivia
), and probably also with
M. isaacsoni
Adrain and Edgecombe, 1996
(Early Devonian,
Bolivia
), and
Maurotarion
nov. sp. A of Adrain and Edgeombe (1996, p. 426; late Emsian or younger,
South Africa
). They also (
Adrain and Edgecombe, 1996, pp. 420–421
) considered that
M. periergum
was related to the
M. dereimsi
group. This opinion was based on the presence of inflated genal spine bases, termination of the lateral border furrow in front of the genal angle and continuation of the posterior border furrow along the genal spine, and an anterior border than is only slightly longer medially than laterally.
Adrain and Edgecombe (1996, p. 422)
tentatively interpreted the entire Malvinokaffric
Maurotarion
species group as monophyletic, and sister to
M. periergum
, implying an episode of Pragian invasion from lower latitudes. This scenario was challenged by the description (
Edgecombe and Fortey, 2000
) of a Silurian Malvinokaffric species of
Maurotarion
from
Bolivia
. Though not well known, this species is potentially a member of the
M. dereimsi
group. Before further biogeographic speculation is engaged in, a formal phylogenetic analysis of the entire genus is required. Such an analysis is beyond the scope of the present paper, but the species described herein provide some of the best known morphological data available for eventual cladistic analysis.