Taxonomy and biostratigraphy of the elasmobranchs and bony fishes (Chondrichthyes and Osteichthyes) of the lower-to-middle Eocene (Ypresian to Bartonian) Claiborne Group in Alabama, USA, including an analysis of otoliths
Author
Ebersole, Jun A.
Author
Cicimurri, David J.
Author
Stringer, Gary L.
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2019
2019-12-06
585
1
274
journal article
24105
10.5852/ejt.2019.585
dca608e8-fccf-4c1c-b8df-ef0c28e1d518
3660259
181B6FBA-ED75-4BB4-84C4-FB512B794749
Abdounia beaugei
(
Arambourg, 1935
)
Fig. 30
Eugaleus beaugei
Arambourg, 1935: 430
, pl. 14, figs 28–35.
Galeus doncieuxi
Leriche, 1936: 391
, pl. 27, fig. 9.
Galeorhinus beaugei
–
Dartevelle & Casier 1943: 154
, pl. 12, figs 40–46.
Scyliorhinus beaugei
–
Arambourg 1952: 123
, pl. 23, figs 20–47.
Abdounia beaugei
–
Cappetta 1980a: 35
, fig. 4.
Abdounia biauriculata
–
Cappetta & Case 2016: 56
, pl. 7, fig. 5.
Material examined
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
–
Alabama
• 50 isolated teeth;
Claiborne Group
;
MSC
35754.1
–
13
,
MSC
37133,
MSC
37318.2
,
MSC
37318.4
,
MSC
37570.3
–
5
,
MSC
37571.1
–
21
,
MSC
37572,
MSC
37695.2
,
SC
2012.47.167,
SC
2012.47.177 (
4 specimens
),
WSU
CC 510
(
2 specimens
)
.
Description
Anterior teeth with tall erect main cusp; cusp of lateral and lateroposterior teeth becoming shorter, more distally inclined. Anterior teeth with single pair of short, triangular cusplets; cusplets divergent and largely united to main cusp. Lateral teeth with two pairs of lateral cusplets; second pair smaller, vestigial on more distally located teeth. Lingual face of main cusp of anterior teeth strongly convex; less convex on lateral teeth. Labial cusp face flat; all enameloid smooth. Cutting edges of main cusp and lateral cusplets smooth, continuous. Root bilobate with short, diverging lobes. Lingual attachment surface flat; wide and deep nutritive groove.
Remarks
Three species of
Abdounia
have been identified within our sample of Claiborne Group teeth, including
A. beaugei
(
Arambourg, 1935
)
,
A. enniskilleni
(
White, 1956
)
, and
A. minutissima
(Winkler, 1874)
. Two additional species previously assigned to
Abdounia
are placed within a new genus and are described in detail below. The
A. beaugei
anterior teeth in our sample have a single pair of lateral cusplets, easily separating them from the latter two species, which have three-to-eight pairs. Anterior teeth of
A. minutissima
have taller triangular cusplets that are less united to the main cusp. Teeth of
A. enniskilleni
are much larger in overall size and generally have fine longitudinal ridges on the lingual cusp face. The lateral teeth of
A. beaugei
have two pairs of lateral cusplets, whereas
A. enniskilleni
and
A. minutissima
have a single pair.
Fig. 30.
Abdounia beaugei
(
Arambourg, 1935
)
, teeth.
A–C
.
MSC
35754.1, anterolateral tooth, lower Tallahatta Formation.
A
. Labial view.
B
. Mesial view.
C
. Lingual view.
D–F
.
MSC
37571.1, lateral tooth, Gosport Sand.
D
. Labial view.
E
. Mesial view.
F
. Lingual view.
G–I
.
MSC
37571.2, anterior tooth, Gosport Sand.
G
. Labial view.
H
. Mesial view.
I
. Lingual view.
J–L
.
MSC
35754.9, lateral tooth, lower Tallahatta Formation.
J
. Labial view.
K
. Mesial view.
L
. Lingual view. Scale bars for A–L=2 mm.
Cappetta & Case (2016)
described and figured a single tooth from site ACov-11 that they assigned to
Abdounia biauriculata
(
Casier, 1946
)
. Teeth of to this species are very similar in size to those of
A. beaugei
, and anterior teeth of both species have a single pair of cusplets and the lateral teeth two pairs (see
Arambourg 1935
: text fig. 23, pl., 19, figs 28–35;
Casier 1946
: pl. 1, 6;
Arambourg 1952
: pl. 23, figs 20–47;
Casier 1966
: pl. 3, figs 23–25). Although
Casier (1966
: fig. 65) stated that the two taxa were “analogous”, he reported that his Ypresian
A. biauriculata
from
Belgium
differed from
Arambourg’s (1952)
A. beaugei
from the Ypresian London Clay and Thanetian to Ypresian strata of
Morocco
in that the teeth have a less robust root, and the lateral cusplets that are taller, straighter, more pointed, and more separated from the main cusp.
When compared to the teeth in our sample, the
Abdounia biauriculata
specimen figured by
Cappetta & Case (2016
: pl. 7, fig. 5) appears anomalous as it has two pairs of tall, pointed cusplets that are separated from the main cusp. Although this single tooth could be identified as
A. biauriculata
, the absence of any other specimens in our sample leads us to believe that it may represent an aberrant
A. minutissima
.
A few teeth from our sample of Gosport Sand
Abdounia
teeth have similar tall and pointed cusplets. However, in our opinion these teeth still fall within the morphological range of
A. beaugei
. Furthermore, as eluded to by
Casier (1966
: fig. 65),
A. beaugei
and
A. biauriculata
may be conspecific, with any observed differences being the product of heterodonty and/or intraspecific or geographic variation. Support for this stems from the difficulty, at times, in distinguishing these two morphologies, and the fact that the morphologies appear to be coeval within the same deposits in
Belgium
(see
Noubhani & Cappetta 1997
). Based on samples from both Alabama (see below) and
Georgia
(also
Parmley & Cicimurri 2003
), the variation we observed in
A. enniskilleni
leads us to believe that
Cappetta & Case’s (2016)
A. biauriculata
is synonymous with
A. beaugei
.
Numerous teeth in our sample are assigned to
Abdounia
sp. (see
Appendix 1
) because of their incomplete preservation, making their specific assignments unclear.
Stratigraphic and geographic range in
Alabama
Abdounia beaugei
specimens have been recovered from the lower Tallahatta Formation at site ADl-1, the contact of the Tallahatta and
Lisbon
formations and the “lower”
Lisbon
Formation at site ACov- 11, the lower Gosport Sand at site ACl-4, and the Gosport Sand at ACl-15. Upper Ypresian to middle Bartonian, zones NP14 to NP17.