Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-45l2p Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T15:37:36.779Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Shell microstructure of the basal pectinid Pleuronectites laevigatus: implications for pectinoid phylogeny (Mollusca: Bivalvia: Pteriomorphia)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2015

Joseph G. Carter
Affiliation:
1Department of Geological Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3315, USA,
Michael Hautmann
Affiliation:
2Paläontologisches Institut und Museum, Karl Schmid-Strasse 4, CH-8006 Zürich, Switzerland,

Abstract

New shell microstructure data for the Triassic pectinid Pleuronectites reinforce shell morphological data suggesting that its family Pectinidae was derived from the superfamily Aviculopectinoidea and not from the Pernopectinidae-Entolioidesidae-Entoliidae clade. This would make the superfamily Pectinoidea, as defined by recent authors, polyphyletic. This would also imply that alivincular-alate ligaments evolved independently in the Pernopectinidae-Entolioidesidae-Entolidae and Pectinidae clades.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Allasinaz, A. 1972. Revisione dei Pettinidi Triassici. Rivista Italiana di Paleontologia e Stratigrafia, 78:189428.Google Scholar
Bittner, A. 1891. Triaspetrefakten von Balia in Kleinasien. Jahrbuch der k. k. Geologischen Reichsanstalt, 41:97116.Google Scholar
Bittner, A. 1901. Lamellibranchiaten aus der Trias des Bakonyer Waldes. Resultate der wissenschaftlichen Erforschung des Balatonsees, Anhang: Palaeontologie der Umgebung des Balatonsees II, 3:1106.Google Scholar
Bøggild, O. B. 1930. The shell structure of the Mollusks. Det Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskabs Skrifter. Naturvidenskabelig og Mathematisk Afdeling, ser. 9, 2:231326.Google Scholar
Boyd, D. W. and Newell, N. D. 1984. Vestigal shell structure in silicified pectinacean pelecypods. Contributions to Geology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, 23:18.Google Scholar
Carter, J. G. 1990. Evolutionary significance of shell microstructure in the Palaeotaxodonta, Pteriomorphia and Isofilibranchia (Bivalvia: Mollusca), p. 135296. In Carter, J. G. (ed.), Skeletal Biomineralisation: Patterns, Processes and Evolutionary Trends. Vol. I. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.Google Scholar
Carter, J. G. and Clark, G. R. II. 1985. Classification and phylogenetic significance of Molluscan shell microstructure, p. 5071. In Broadhead, T. W., (ed.), Mollusks, Notes for a Short Course, organized by Bottjer, D. J., Hickman, C. S., and Ward, P. D., University of Tennessee Department of Geological Sciences Studies in Geology 13, 305 p. Google Scholar
Carter, J. G. and Lutz, R. A. 1990. Part 2, Bivalvia (Mollusca), p. 528, p. ls. 1-121 In Carter, J. G. (ed.), Skeletal Biomineralization: Patterns, Processes and Evolutionary Trends, vol. II, Atlas. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.Google Scholar
Carter, J. G., Bandel, K., de Buffrénil, V., Carlson, S. J., Castanet, J., Crenshaw, M. A., Dalingwater, J. E., Francillon-Vieillot, H., Géraudie, J., Meunier, F. J., Mutvei, H., Ricqlès, A., de Sire, J. Y., Smith, A. B., Wendt, J., Williams, A., and Zylberberg, L. 1990. Glossary of Skeletal Biomineralization, p. 609671. In Carter, J. G. (ed.), Skeletal Biomineralisation: Patterns, Processes and Evolutionary Trends. Vol. I. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York.Google Scholar
Chen, C.-C. 1962. Lamellibranchiata from the Upper Permian of Ziyun, Guizhou (Kueichow). Acta Palaeontologica Sinica, 10:199205.Google Scholar
Hautmann, M. 2001. Die Muschelfauna der Nayband-Formation (Obertrias, Nor-Rhät) des östlichen Zentraliran. Beringeria, 29:1181.Google Scholar
Hautmann, M. 2004. Early Mesozoic evolution of alivincular bivalve ligaments and its implications for the timing of the “Mesozoic marine revolution.” Lethaia, 37:165172.Google Scholar
Hautmann, M. 2010. The first scallop. Paläontologische Zeitschrift, 84:317322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayami, I. 1988. Taxonomic characters of propeamussiids from Japan. Venus. The Japanese Journal of Malacology, 47:7182.Google Scholar
Hertlein, L. G. 1969. Family Pectinidae Rafinesque, 1815, p. N348N373. In Moore, R. C. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Pt. N Mollusca 6. Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, Boulder.Google Scholar
Korobkov, I. A. 1960. Anisomyaria, p. 83. In Eberzin, A. G. (ed.), Osnovy Paleontologii, Vol. 3. Academy Nauk USSR, Moscow.Google Scholar
Meek, F. B. and Hayden, F. V. 1864. Palaeontology of the Upper Missouri. Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge, 14:1135.Google Scholar
Newell, N. D. 1938. Late Paleozoic Pelecypods: Pectinacea. State Geological Survey of Kansas, 10:1123 (for 1937).Google Scholar
Newell, N. D. and Boyd, D. W. 1985. Permian Scallops of the Pectinacean Family Streblochondriidae. American Museum Novitates, 2831:113.Google Scholar
Newell, N. D. and Boyd, D. W. 1995. Pectinoid bivalves of the Permian-Triassic crisis. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 227:195.Google Scholar
Rafinesque-Schmaltz, C. S. 1815. Analyse de la nature ou tableau de l'Univers dt des corps organisés. Jean Barravecchia, Palermo, 224 p.Google Scholar
Repin, Y. S. 1996. New Late Triassic Bivalves from Iran and a taxonomy of the superfamily Spondylacea. Paleontological Journal, 30:363369.Google Scholar
Romanov, L. F. 1985. Iurskie pectinoidy Iuga SSSR (Jurassic pectinoids from southern U.S.S.R.). Shtiintsa, Kishinev, 232 p. (In Russian).Google Scholar
Schlotheim, E. F. von. 1820. Die Petrefactenkunde auf ihrem jetzigen Standpunkte durch die Beschreibung seiner Sammlung versteinerter und fossiler Überreste des Thier- und Pflanzenreichs der Vorwelt erläutert. Becker'sche Buchhandlung, Gotha, 437 p.Google Scholar
Schlotheim, E. F. von. 1823. Nachträge zur Petrefactenkunde. Becker'sche Buchhandlung, Gotha, 114 p.Google Scholar
Stanley, S. M. 1972. Functional morphology and evolution of byssally attached Bivalve Mollusks. Journal of Paleontology, 46:165212.Google Scholar
Waller, T. R. 1971. The class scallop Propeamussium, a living relict of the past. American Malacological Union, Inc., Annual report, 1970:57.Google Scholar
Waller, T. R. 1978. Morphology, morphoclines and a new classification of the Pteriomorphia (Mollusca: Bivalvia). Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, Series B, 284:345365.Google Scholar
Waller, T. R. 1984. The ctenolium of scallop shells: functional morphology and evolution of a key family-level character in the Pectinacea (Mollusca: Bivalvia). Malacologia, 25:203219.Google Scholar
Waller, T. R. 2005. Systematic Paleontology, p. 750. In Waller, T. R. and Stanley, G. D., Middle Triassic Pteriomorphian Bivalvia (Mollusca) from the New Pass Range, west-central Nevada: Systematics, Biostratigraphy, Paleoecology, and Paleobiogeography. Paleontological Society Memoir, 61.Google Scholar
Waller, T. R. 2006. Phylogeny of families in the Pectinoidea (Mollusca: Bivalvia): importance of the fossil record. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 148:313342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Winchell, A. 1865. Descriptions of new species of fossils, from the Marshall Group, and its supposed equivalent, in other states; with notes on some fossils of the same age previously described. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1865:109133.Google Scholar
Winkler, G. 1859. Die Schichten mit Avicula contorta inner- und außerhalb der Alpen. Palm, München, 51 p.Google Scholar