Systematics of the family Carditidae (Bivalvia: Archiheterodonta) in the Cenozoic of Argentina
Author
Pérez, Damián E.
Author
Del Río, Claudia J.
text
Zootaxa
2017
2017-10-24
4338
1
51
84
journal article
31761
10.11646/zootaxa.4338.1.3
26f58d19-4735-470a-a8c7-f9b5cea8a1d6
1175-5326
1035558
398F004C-B562-415B-916D-DBA32EF0F88E
Genus
Scalaricardita
Sacco, 1899
Type
species.
Venericardia scalaris
J. de
C. Sowerby, 1825
(pl. 490, fig. 3) (by original designation),
upper Miocene-Pliocene
of the
Vienna Basin
,
Italy
and
Poland
;
Pliocene of North Sea Basin.
Diagnosis.
Carditid with subtriangular to subcircular outline. Small umbo. Lunule long and flat. Right middle tooth triangular and broad, left anterior tooth straight. External sculpture of 23 to 27 wide radial ribs, covered by closely-spaced subrectangular nodes with wide intercostal spaces sometimes reduced to a very narrow groove.
Included species.
S. camaronesia
(
Ihering, 1907
)
(lower Miocene, Argentina),
S. compacta
(
Tate, 1886
)
(middle Miocene, Australia),
S. laciarina
(
Feruglio, 1954
)
(lower Pliocene, Argentina),
S. miniscula
(
Bartrum & Powell, 1928
)
(upper Pliocene, New Zealand) and
S. subcompacta
(
Chapman & Crespin, 1928
)
(lower Pliocene, Australia).
Remarks
.
Sacco (1899)
erected the genus in order to separate
Venericardia scalaris
from
Miodontiscus
Dall, 1903
, and
Coripia
de
Gregorio, 1885
; which comprise very small-sized Cenozoic carditids from
Italy
. Sacco also indicated that
Scalaricardita
has a smaller shell with less circular outline, less convex dorsal margin, more pronounced radial ribs with subrectangular instead of subrounded nodes, provided with smaller and less curved right middle tooth and less curved right posterior tooth.
Sacco (1899)
mentioned that
V. scalaris
could be related to
Cyclocardia
Conrad, 1867
by similarities in outline and shell sculpture, and later
Dall (1902
;
1903
) and
Thiele (1935)
suggested a possible synonymy between
Scalaricardita
and
Cyclocardia
.
Scalaricardita
can be separated from
Miodontiscus
and
Coripia
, by having a more rounded shell with subcentrally placed umbo, less radial ribs with subrectangular nodes and narrower intercostal spaces.
Scalaricardita
differs from
Pleuromeris
Conrad, 1867
(type species
P. decemcostata
Conrad, 1867
; Pliocene– Pleistocene of USA) by having a less triangular outline and a higher number of radial ribs separated by narrower intercostal spaces.
The genus is represented in the Miocene and Pliocene of Europe by the type species (
Sacco 1899
; Glibert & Van der
Poel 1970
;
Raffi
et al.
1985
;
Studencka 1986
;
Janssen & Moerdijk 2004
) and Australia (
Darragh, 1970
) by
S. compacta
(
Tate, 1886
)
(Mudy Creek Formation, middle Miocene) and
S. subcompacta
(
Chapman & Crespin, 1928
)
(Sorrento Bore, lower Pliocene).
Pleuromeris miniscula
Bartrum & Powell, 1928
(Kaawa Creeks Beds, upper Pliocene, New Zealand) may be belongs to
Scalaricardita
since it has a subcircular outline, umbo subcentrally placed, and by having 22 radial ribs with subrectangular nodes and very narrow intercostal spaces.