Atrypa

Atrypa is a genus of brachiopod with shells round to short egg-shaped, covered with many fine radial ridges (or costae), that split further out and growthlines perpendicular to the costae and 2-3 times wider spaced. The pedunculate valve is a little convex, but tends to level out or even become slightly concave toward the anterior margin (that is: opposite hinge and pedicle). The brachial valve is highly convex. There is no interarea (that is a flat area bordering the hinge line approximately perpendicular with the rest of the valve) in either valve. Atrypa was a cosmopolitan and occurred from the late Lower Silurian (Telychian) to the early Upper Devonian (Frasnian).[4] Other sources expand the range from the Late Ordovician to Carboniferous, approximately from 449 to 336 Ma.[3] A proposed new species, A. harrisi, was found in the trilobite-rich Floresta Formation in Boyacá, Colombia.[5]

Atrypa
Temporal range: Late Ordovician-Carboniferous
~449–336 Ma
Atrypa reticularis, 26mm, Eifel, Germany
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Atrypida
Suborder:
Atripidina
Family:
Atrypidae
Genus:
Atrypa

Dalman, 1828
Species
  • A. reticularis Linneaus, 1758 (type) = Anemia reticularis, A. dzwinogrodensis[1]
  • A. devoniana Webster, 1921[2]
  • A. jukesii [3]
  • A. nevadana [3]
  • A. oklahomensis [3]
  • A. oneidensis [3]
  • A. putilla [3]
Synonyms

Cleiothyris Phillips, 1841, Mikrothyris

Reassigned species

As Atrypa was erected early on, many species have been reassigned since.[4]

  • A. arata = Pentamerella arata
  • A. aspera var. occidentalis = Spinatrypa occidentalis
  • A. astuta = Felinotoechia astuta
  • A. congregata = Camarotoechia congregata
  • A. coralifera = Dictyonella coralifera
  • A. depressa = Plagiorhyncha glassii
  • A. dubia = Protorhyncha dubia
  • A. elongata = Rensselaeria elongata
  • A. exigua = Protozyga exigua
  • A. extans = Triplesia extans
  • A. flabellites = Leptocoelia propria
  • A. gruenwaldtiaeformis = Nalivkinia gruenwaldtiaeformis
  • A. hemiplicata = Parastrophina hemiplicata
  • A. hemisphaerica = Eocoelia hemisphaerica
  • A. hircina = Hircinisca hircina
  • A. hirsuta = Parazyga hirsuta
  • A. hystrix var. occidentalis = Spinatrypa occidentalis
  • A. increbescens = Rhynchotrema increbescens
  • A. kolymensis = Vagrania kolymensis
  • A. laevis = Meristella laevis
  • A. lens = Stricklandia lens
  • A. linguifera = Antirhynchonella linguifera
  • A. medialis = Eatonia medialis
  • A. modesta = Zygospira modesta
  • A. nitens = Hisingerella nitens
  • A. nitida = Whitfieldella nitida
  • A. nucella = Lycophoria nucella
  • A. obovata = Glassia obovata
  • A. obtusiplicata = Pectorhyncha obtusiplicata
  • A. peculiaris = Costellirostra peculiaris
  • A. plebeia = Dicamara plebeia
  • A. pleiopleura = Pleiopleurina pleiopleura
  • A. prunum = Atrypella prunum
  • A. recurvirostra = Zygospira recurvirostra
  • A. scitula = Charionella scitula
  • A. sordida = Cyclocoelia sordida
  • A. tumida = Meristina tumida
  • A. unisulcata = Pentagonia peersii

Organic content of Atrypa fossils

In some fossil material, organic compounds may be preserved. Only the more stable amino acids tend to be preserved in very old fossils. In specimens of Atrypa reticularis from the Wenlock Shales (Lower Silurian), alanine, glycine, glutamic acid, leucine, isoleucine, proline, valine, and aspartic acid have been found.[4]

gollark: It is HONEST about it, though.
gollark: It's incredibly easy.
gollark: The logs are kind of unformatted JSON and hard to use.
gollark: Anyway, solarflame, please send a command so I can get the sender ID.
gollark: Also, you clearly don't.

References

  1. Paleobiodiversity in Baltoscandia. "Atrypa (Atrypa) reticularis". fossiilid.info. Retrieved 2012-03-22.
  2. M.A. Stainbrook (1945). Brachiopoda of the Independence Shale of Iowa. Geological Society of America Memoirs. 14. ISBN 0813710146.
  3. Atrypa at Fossilworks.org
  4. Moore, R.C. (1965). Brachiopoda. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part H., Volume 1 and 2. Boulder, Colorado/Lawrence, Kansas: Geological Society of America/University of Kansas Press. ISBN 0-8137-3015-5.
  5. Floresta Series Fauna at Fossilworks.org


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.