Lingulella | |
---|---|
L. caelata[1] | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Brachiopoda |
Class: | Lingulata |
Order: | Lingulida |
Family: | Obolidae |
Genus: | Lingulella Salter, 1886[2] |
Type species | |
Lingula davisii[3][4] M'Coy, 1851[5] | |
Species | |
See text |
Lingulella is a genus of phosphatic-shelled[6] brachiopod. It is known from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale (Canada) to the Upper Ordovician Bromide Formation (United States) in North America.[7][8] 346 specimens of Lingulella are known from the Greater Phyllopod bed, where they comprise 0.66% of the community.[9]
Some specimens of the brachiopod preserve the pedicle intact, which was long and thin.[6] The brachiopod is thought to have been a generalist, as it appears consistently throughout the strata of the Greater Phyllopod bed.
Species
The following species have been identified:
- L. agaue Mergl & Kordule, 2008
- L. alabamensis
- L. alata Holmer, 1989
- L. alia
- L. allani Walcott, 1912
- L. amabilis Reed, 1917
- L. angustata
- L. angustior Reed, 1917
- L. antiquissima Jeremejew, 1856
- L. arachne Barrande, 1879
- L. arctica Walcott, 1924
- L. arguta
- L. augusta
- L. afga
- L. bella
- L. bellisculpta Clark, 1935
- L. bohemica Koliha, 1921
- L. borealis
- L. brainerdi
- L. brevis Portlock, 1843
- L. bridgei
- L. bukovensis Koliha, 1924
- L. burnetensis
- L. buttsi
- L. bynguanoensis Roberts in Roberts & Jell, 1990[10]
- L. caelata
- L. carrickensis Reed, 1917
- L. chapa
- L. chengjiangensis Jin, Hou & Wang, 1993
- L. chinchiaensis Kobayashi, 1933
- L. chinensis
- L. chuarensis
- L. circa Xu & Liu, 1984
- L. clarkei
- L. clivosa Pelman, 1983
- L. clochensis?
- L. columba
- L. concinna
- L. corralensis Rusconi, 1950?
- L. damesi
- L. davisii (McCoy, 1851)
- L. decorticata
- L. delgadoi
- L. derwentii Postlethwaite, 1897
- L. desiderata
- L. dimorpha
- L. displosa Williams 1974
- L. dotensis Kobayashi, 1934
- L. dusaaulti Patte, 1929
- L. dzhavodiensis Sobolev, 1975
- L. elata Pelman, 1986
- L. ellsi
- L. endopunctata
- L. eucharis Resser, 1939
- L. euglypha
- L. exilis
- L. exortiva
- L. expulsa Barrande, 1879
- L. fenxiangensis Wang, 1978
- L. ferox
- L. ferruginea Salter in Salter & Hicks, 1867
- L. fostermontensis
- L. franklinensis
- L. galba
- L. genei
- L. glypta
- L. grandis
- L. granvillensis
- L. haimantensis
- L. halei
- L. hatai
- L. havliceki Mergl & Slehoferova, 1990
- L. hayaeri
- L. hayesi
- L. hesperia Williams & Curry, 1985
- L. hilli
- L. hinganensis Su, 1980
- L. hitka
- L. howardi Postlethwaite, 1897
- L. hsiensis
- L. humaensis Su, 1980
- L. huronensis
- L. ibicus
- L. idahoensis Resser, 1938
- L. iddingsi
- L. ino
- L. insons Barr.
- L. intermedia Liu, Zhu & Xue, 1985
- L. irene
- L. iris
- L. jakutensis
- L. jerseyensis
- L. kalpinensis Zhang, 1981
- L. kanabensis Resser, 1945
- L. kanlingensis Zhang, 1981
- L. kayseri Sun, 1923
- L. kiddoi
- L. kingstonensis
- L. kitatiensis Aksarina, 1978
- L. lasherensis Rusconi, 1951
- L. lata Koliha, 1924
- L. lepis Salter, 1866
- L. libecovensis Koliha, 1918
- L. lineolata
- L. linguata Pelman, 1977
- L. lirata
- L. lithuanica Korkutis, 1971
- L. liui
- L. lochmanae
- L. longa
- L. longula
- L. major Teixeira, Ribeiro & Silva, 1964
- L. manchuriensis
- L. mania
- L. manticula
- L. marcia Walcott, 1911
- L. martillensis Rusconi, 1952
- L. matthewi Koliha, 1921
- L. mcconnelli Walcott, 1889
- L. mechos/nechos
- L. mehaeigueni Legrand, 1974
- L. miltoni
- L. minus
- L. minuscula Sobolev, 1975
- L. modesta Lochman, 1940
- L. montana Fenton & Fenton, 1936
- L. monticola
- L. moosensis<
- L. morsei
- L. mosia
- L. murcia var. templetonensis Chapman, 1929
- L. narrawayi
- L. nepos
- L. nerva
- L. nicholsoni Callaway, 1877
- L. nina
- L. nicholsoni Callaway, 1877
- L. paliformis
- L. parvula
- L. pela densis Rusconi, 1951
- L. pennsylvanica
- L. perattenuata
- L. petalon Davidson, 1868
- L. pingchouensis
- L. pingchouensis
- L. proveedorensis Cooper, 1952/1954
- L. putilla
- L. quadrilateralis
- L. quaestor Reed, 1917
- L. raymondi Clark, 1924
- L. remius/remus
- L. reticulata
- L. rideauensis
- L. rotunda Pelman, 1977
- L. rugosilinea
- L. sanfangensis
- L. sculptilis
- L. sequens
- L. shansiensis
- L. siliqua
- L. silurica Yadrenkina, 1986
- L. solitariensis Rusconi, 1950
- L. spicata
- L. spitiensis
- L. stonei
- L. ubdivisa Rusconi, 1950
- L. subfusula Su, 1980
- L. subparallela
- L. sufi Mergl & Slehoferova, 1990
- L. sulcata Barrande, 1879
- L. taijiangensis Huang, Wang, Zhao & Dai, 1994
- L. takayamai
- L. tangshihensias
- L. tarpa
- L. tenuitesta
- L. terranovica Howell, 1943
- L. texana
- L. texana
- L. thems mckeei Resser, 1945
- L. tomkolensis Kobayashi, 1934
- L. tsuchidai
- L. turneri
- L. variabilis Pelman, 1977
- L. variolata
- L. vermontensis
- L. virginiensis
- L. viridis Cobbold, 1921
- L. wanniecki
- L. waptaensis
- L. welleri
- L. wirthi
- L. wongi
- L. yabei
- L. yingtzuensie Kobayashi, 1931
- L. yongchengensis Zeng, 1977
- L. yuechiensis Xu, 1978
- L. zejszneri Bednarczyk, 1960
- L. zetus
- L. zeus
- L. zulupeana Rusconi, 1954
Reclassified species
- L. acuminata Walcott, 1908 (current name Lingulepis acuminata Conrad)
- L. acuta Pelman, 1977
- L. acutangula (current name Lingulepis acutangulus Roemer, 1849)
- L. africana Legrand, 1974
Distribution
Fossils of Lingulella have been found in:[11]
- Cambrian
Australia, Canada (British Columbia, New Brunswick), China, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Greenland, India, Italy, Kazakhstan, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, Pakistan, Poland, the Russian Federation, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States (Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, New York, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin, Wyoming).
- Ordovician
Argentina, Australia, Canada (Newfoundland and Labrador, Quebec), China, Colombia (Serranía de la Macarena, Meta), the Czech Republic, France, Ireland, Mexico, Peru, Poland, the Russian Federation, Spain, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States (Alabama, Kentucky, Montana, Nevada, New York, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia).
- Devonian
Vietnam.
References
- ↑ Charles Doolittle Walcott (1886). Second contribution to the studies on the Cambrian faunas of North America. Vol. 30 of Geological Survey bulletin. Govt. Print. Off. pp. 1–369.
- ↑ Salter, J. W. (1866). "Appendix. On the fossils of North Wales". The Geology of North Wales. By Ramsay, A.C. Memoirs of the Geological Survey of Great Britain. Vol. 3. London: Longmans, Green, Reader, and Dyer. pp. 333–334.
- ↑ Dall, W. H. (1870). "A revision of the Terebratulidae and Lingulidae". American Journal of Conchology. New Series. 6 (2): 159.
- ↑ Sutton, Mark D.; Bassett, Michael G.; Cherns, Lesley (2000). "The Type Species of Lingulella (Cambrian Brachiopoda)". Journal of Paleontology. 74 (3): 426–438. doi:10.1017/S0022336000031693. JSTOR 1306865.
- ↑ M'Coy, Frederick (1851). "On some new Cambro-Silurian Fossils" (PDF). The Annals and Magazine of Natural History. Second Series. 8 (47): 405–406. doi:10.1080/03745486109494991.
- 1 2 Pettersson Stolk, S.; Holmer, L. E.; Caron, J. B. (2010). "First record of the brachiopod Lingulella waptaensis with pedicle from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale". Acta Zoologica. 91 (2): 150–162. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6395.2009.00394.x.
- ↑ Amsden, T.W. Catalogue of Fossils from the Middle and Upper Ordovician of Oklahoma. Oklahoma Geological Survey, Circular 43. 1957
- ↑ Byrnes, J.G. Notes on the Nature and Environmental Significance of the Receptaculitaceae. Lethaia, Vol. 1, pp. 368-381 (1968)
- ↑ Caron, Jean-Bernard; Jackson, Donald A. (October 2006). "Taphonomy of the Greater Phyllopod Bed community, Burgess Shale". PALAIOS. 21 (5): 451–65. Bibcode:2006Palai..21..451C. doi:10.2110/palo.2003.P05-070R. JSTOR 20173022. S2CID 53646959.
- ↑ Roberts, John; Jell, Peter A. (1990). "Early Middle Cambrian (Ordian) brachiopods of the Coonigan Formation, western New South Wales". Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. 14 (4): 257–309. doi:10.1080/03115519008619059.
- ↑ Lingulella at Fossilworks.org
External links
- "Lingulella waptaensis". Burgess Shale Fossil Gallery. Virtual Museum of Canada. 2011. Archived from the original on 2020-11-12.