Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-17T16:03:08.697Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Morphology, systematics, and evolution of Middle Devonian Ambocoeliidae (Brachiopoda), western New York

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

Daniel Goldman
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, State University of New York at Buffalo 14226
Charles E. Mitchell
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, State University of New York at Buffalo 14226

Abstract

The internal morphology of ambocoeliid brachiopods from the Middle Devonian Hamilton Group of western New York indicates a need for several taxonomic revisions. “Ambocoelia” praeumbona is transferred to Emanuella. “Ambocoelia” spinosa and “A.” nana represent Crurispina n. gen. Specimens of species belonging to Crurispina have moderately well developed crural plates, and, accordingly, they are assigned to the subfamily Rhynchospiriferinae. Crural plates are small and obscure but clearly present in Ambocoelia umbonata, the type species of Ambocoelia. Thus, the diagnosis of the subfamily Ambocoeliinae is emended to include species with tiny crural plates.

Ambocoeliid specimens from the Levanna Shale Member of the Skaneateles Formation, formerly referred to Echinocoelia, reveal several elaborate features in the pedicle valve, including an apical plate and a hollow tube supported by a median septum. These specimens represent a new genus and species, Mucroclipeus eliei. The homeomorphy found in the shape and size of these ambocoeliids may be the result of paedomorphosis. Additionally, their pattern of occurrence and minute size suggest that they attained their paedomorphic state through progenesis. The taxa Ambocoelia tuberculata n. sp., Crurispina n. gen., and Mucroclipeus eliei n. gen. and sp. are established.

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

Alexander, R. 1977. Growth, morphology and ecology of Paleozoic and Mesozoic opportunistic species of brachiopods from Idaho–Utah. Journal of Paleontology, 51:11331149.Google Scholar
Biernat, G. 1953. O trzech brachiopodach z tzw. wapienia stringocefalowego Gor Swietokrzyskich. Acta Geologica Polonica. 3:299324.Google Scholar
Boucot, A. J. 1959. Early Devonian Ambocoeliinae (Brachiopoda). Journal of Paleontology, 53:1624.Google Scholar
Bowen, Z. P., Rhoads, D. C., and McAlester, A. L. 1974. Marine benthic communities in the upper Devonian of New York. Lethaia, 7:93120.Google Scholar
Brett, C. E., and Baird, G. C. 1982. Upper Moscow-Genesee stratigraphic relationships in western New York: evidence for regional erosive beveling in the late Middle Devonian, p. 1962. In Buehler, E. J. and Calkin, P. E. (eds.), New York State Geological Association Guidebook, 54th Annual Meeting, State University of New York at Buffalo.Google Scholar
Brett, C. E., Speyer, S. E., and Baird, G. C. 1986. Storm-generated sedimentary units: tempestite proximality and event stratification in the Middle Devonian Hamilton Group of New York, p. 129156. In Brett, C. E. (ed.), Dynamic Stratigraphy and Depositional Environments of the Hamilton Group (Middle Devonian) in New York State. New York State Museum Bulletin 457.Google Scholar
Caldwell, W. G. E. 1967. Ambocoeliid brachiopods from the Middle Devonian rocks of northern Canada, p. 601616. In Oswald, D. H. (ed.), International Symposium on the Devonian System. Alberta Society of Petroleum Geologists Calgary, Alberta.Google Scholar
Chernyshev, T. N. 1887. Die fauna des mittleren und oberen Devon am West-Abhange des Urals. Memoir Commite Geologique 3, no. 3, 208 p.Google Scholar
Clarke, J. M. 1894. The succession of the fossil faunas in the section of the Livonia salt shaft. Thirteenth Annual Report of the New York State Geologist, Report for 1893, 180 p.Google Scholar
Cleland, H. F. 1903. A study of the fauna of the Hamilton Formation of the Cayuga Lake section in central New York. U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 206, 112 p.Google Scholar
Conrad, T. A. 1842. Observations on the Silurian and Devonian Systems of the United States with descriptions of new organic remains. Journal of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 8:264.Google Scholar
Cooper, G. A. 1930. Stratigraphy of the Hamilton Group of New York. American Journal of Science, 19:116134, 214-236.Google Scholar
Cooper, G. A. 1956. Pustulatia, new name for the Devonian brachiopod Pustulina, preoccupied. Journal of Paleontology, 30:769.Google Scholar
Cooper, G. A., and Williams, J. S. 1935. Tully Formation of New York. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 46:781868.Google Scholar
Crickmay, C. H. 1967. The method of indivisible aggregates in studies of the Devonian. Published by the author, Calgary, Alberta, 21 p.Google Scholar
Dürkoop, A. 1970. Brachiopoden aus dem Silur, Devon, und Karbon in Afghanistan. Palaeontographica, 134(A):194205.Google Scholar
Dutro, J. T. 1981. Devonian brachiopod biostratigraphy of New York State, p. 6781. In Oliver, W. A. Jr., and Klapper, G. (eds.), Devonian Biostratigraphy of New York. Part 1, Text. International Union of Geological Sciences Subcommission on Devonian Stratigraphy, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Ficner, F., and Havlíček, V. 1978. Middle Devonian brachiopods from Čelechovice, Moravia. Sbornik geologickehe věd, paleontologie, 21:49104.Google Scholar
George, T. N. 1931. Ambocoelia Hall and certain similar British Spiriferidae. Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London, 87:3061.Google Scholar
Gould, S. J. 1977. Ontogeny and Phylogeny. Belknap Press Cambridge, Massachusetts, 501 p.Google Scholar
Grabau, A. W. 1898. The faunas of the Hamilton Group of Eighteen Mile Creek and vicinity in western New York. 16th Annual Report of the New York State Geologist for 1896, 1898, p. 279339.Google Scholar
Grabau, A. W. 1899. The geology and paleontology of Eighteen Mile Creek, and the lake shore sections of Erie County, New York. Buffalo Society of Natural Science Bulletin, 6(2), 390 p.Google Scholar
Grabau, A. W. 1923. Stratigraphy of China, Volume 1: Paleozoic and older. China Geological Survey, 528 p.Google Scholar
Grabau, A. W. 1931. Devonian Brachiopods of China I: Devonian brachiopods from the Yunnan and other districts in south China. Palaeontologica Sinica, Ser. B, 3(3), 545 p.Google Scholar
Grasso, T. X. 1986. Redefinition, stratigraphy, and depositional environments of the Motville Member (Hamilton Group) in central and eastern New York, p. 531. In Brett, C. E. (ed.), Dynamic Stratigraphy and Depositional Environments of the Hamilton Group (Middle Devonian) in New York State, Pt. 1. New York State Museum Bulletin 457.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1843. Geology of New York, Pt. 4, comprising the survey of the Fourth Geological District. Albany, New York, 525 p.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1857. Descriptions of Paleozoic fossils. Tenth annual report of the New York State Cabinet of Natural History, p. 167168.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1860. Observations on the genus Ambocoelia . Thirteenth Annual Report for the Regents of the University, p. 7172.Google Scholar
Hall, J. 1867. Descriptions and figures of the fossil Brachiopoda of the upper Helderberg, Hamilton, Portage, and Chemung Groups. New York State Geological Survey, Paleontology 4, Pt. 1, 428 p.Google Scholar
Hall, J., and Clarke, J. M. 1892–1895. An introduction to the study of the genera of Paleozoic Brachiopoda. Paleontology of New York 8, Pt. 2, 394 p.Google Scholar
Hamada, T. 1968a. Swaicoelia, a new ambocoeliid genus (Brachiopoda) from North Thailand. Contributions to the Geology and Paleontology of Southeast Asia, 5:112.Google Scholar
Hamada, T. 1968b. Ambocoeliids from red beds in the Malayan Peninsula. Contributions to the Geology and Paleontology of Southeast Asia, 5:1325.Google Scholar
Havlíček, V. 1953. O několika nových ramenonožcich českého a moravského středniho devonu. Ústředniho ústavu geologickéhe, Věstnik 28:49.Google Scholar
Havlíček, V. 1959. Spiriferidae v. ćeskěm Siluru a Devonu [with English translation of text]. Rospravy Ústředniho ústavu geologickéhe, 275 p.Google Scholar
Hickey, D. R., and Younker, J. L. 1981. Structure and composition of a Pennsylvanian benthic community. Journal of Paleontology, 55:112.Google Scholar
Ivanova, Ye. A. 1967. Origin and scope of the order Spiriferida. Paleontological Journal, 4:5163.Google Scholar
Ivanova, Ye. A. 1972. Main features of spiriferid evolution. Paleontological Journal, 3:309320.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G., Klapper, G., and Trojan, W. R. 1980. Brachiopod and conodont successions in the Devonian of the northern Antelope Range, central Nevada. Geologica et Palaeontologica, 14:77116.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. G., and Trojan, W. R. 1982. The Tecnocyrtina brachiopod fauna (?Upper Devonian) of central Nevada. Geologica et Palaeontologica, 16:119150.Google Scholar
Kayser, E. 1883. Devonische Versteinerungen aus dem sudwestlichen China. In F. F. Richthofen, China (4). Reimer, Berlin, 288.Google Scholar
Kelus, A. von 1939. Devonishe brachiopoden und korallen der Umgebung von Pelcza in Volhynien. Poland Institut Geologique Bulletin, 8:151.Google Scholar
Klapper, G. 1981. Review of New York Devonian conodont biostratigraphy, p. 5766. In Oliver, W. A. Jr., and Klapper, G. (eds.), Devonian Biostratigraphy of New York, Part 1, Text. International Union of Geological Sciences Subcommission on Devonian Stratigraphy, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Kozłowski, R. 1929. Les brachiopods Gothlandiens de la Podolie Polonaise. Palaeontologia Polonica, 1, 254 p.Google Scholar
Landing, E., and Brett, C. E. 1987. Trace fossils and regional significance of a Middle Devonian (Givetian) disconformity in southwestern Ontario. Journal of Paleontology, 61:205230.Google Scholar
Levinton, J. S. 1970. The paleoecologic significance of opportunistic species. Lethaia, 3:6978.Google Scholar
Lyaschenko, A. I. 1960. Novie widji devonskich brachiopod Wolgo-Uralskoi oblasti. Trudy vsesoyuznyi nauchno-issledovatelskii geologicheskii institut 16, Palaeontologii, Sbornik, 3:537.Google Scholar
Lyaschenko, A. I. 1969. New Devonian brachiopods from the central and western areas of the Russian Platform. Ministervo Geologii SSSR, VNIGNI Trudy, 93:927.Google Scholar
Maillieux, E. 1909. Notes sur les Cyrtina devoniennes du bord Sud du bassin de Dinant. Bulletin of the Royal Society Belgique Geology, Palaeontology, Hydrology, 23(5):256260.Google Scholar
Meek, F. B. 1867. Remarks on the geology of the valley of the Mackenzie River, with figures and descriptions of fossils from that region, in the museum of the Smithsonian Institution. Transactions of the Chicago Academy of Science, 1:61114.Google Scholar
Miller, K. B. 1986. Depositional environments and sequences, “Pleurodictyum Zone,” Ludlowville Formation of western New York, p. 5777. In Brett, C. E. (ed.), Dynamic Stratigraphy and Depositional Environments of the Hamilton Group (Middle Devonian) in New York State, Pt. 1. New York State Museum Bulletin 457.Google Scholar
Mitchell, S. W. 1967. Stratigraphy of the Silica Formation of Ohio and the Hungry Hollow Formation of Ontario, with paleogeographic interpretations. Papers of the Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters, 52:175196.Google Scholar
Nalivkin, D. V. 1925. Gruppa Spirifer anossofi Verneuil i Devon Europeyskoy chasti S.S.S.R. Russische-Kaiserl., Mineralogischeskogo Gesellschaft Zapiski, 54(2):267358.Google Scholar
Nalivkin, D. V. 1941. Brakhiopody glavnogo Devonskogo Polya, p. 139226. In Batalina, M. A. (ed.), Fauna Glavnogo Devonskogo Polya. Akadamie Nauk SSSR, Paleontologicheskiy Institut.Google Scholar
Paulus, B. 1957. Rhynchospirifer n. gen. im Rheinschen Devon. Senckenbergiana Lethaea, 38:4972.Google Scholar
Phillips, J. 1841. Figures and descriptions of the Paleozoic fossils of Cornwall, Devon, and West Somerset. Longman and Co., London, 231 p.Google Scholar
Pitrat, C. W. 1965. Spiriferidina, p. 667728. In Moore, R. C. (ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Pt. H, Brachiopoda. Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Rickard, L. V. 1975. Correlation of the Silurian and Devonian rocks in New York State. New York State Museum Map and Chart Series 24, 16 p.Google Scholar
Rong, J., and Yang, X. 1979. Silurian spiriferoids from southwest China with special reference to their stratigraphic significance. Acta Paleontologica Sinica, 17:357387.Google Scholar
Savarese, M., Gray, L. M., and Brett, C. E. 1986. Faunal and lithologic cyclicity in the Centerfield Member (Middle Devonian, Hamilton Group) of western New York: a reinterpretation of depositional history, p. 3256. In Brett, C. E. (ed.), Dynamic stratigraphy and depositional environments of the Hamilton Group (Middle Devonian) in New York State, Pt. 1. New York State Museum Bulletin 457.Google Scholar
Shimer, H. W., and Grabau, A. W. 1902. Hamilton Group of Thedford Ontario. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 13:149186.Google Scholar
Shumard, B. F. 1855. Description of new species of organic remains, p. 185208. In Swallow, G. C., First and Second Annual Reports of the Geological Survey of Missouri, Pt. 2.Google Scholar
Stehli, F. G. 1954. Lower Leonardian Brachiopoda of the Sierra Diablo. American Museum of Natural History Bulletin, 105:275308.Google Scholar
Thayer, C. W. 1974. Marine paleoecology in the upper Devonian of New York. Lethaia, 7:121155.Google Scholar
Vandercammen, A. 1956. Revision des Ambocoeliinae du Devonien de la Belgique. Institut Royal des Sciences naturelles de Belgique Bulletin, 32(43):151.Google Scholar
Vanuxem, L. 1840. Fourth Annual Report of the Geologic Survey of the Third District. New York State Geological Survey Annual Report, 4:355388.Google Scholar
Veevers, J. J. 1959a. Devonian brachiopods from the Fitzroy Basin, western Australia. Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics Bulletin, 45:123140.Google Scholar
Veevers, J. J. 1959b. The type species of Productella, Emanuella, Crurithyris, and Ambocoelia (Brachiopoda). Journal of Paleontology, 33:902908.Google Scholar
Wagen, W. H. 1883. Salt Range fossils, Pt. 4(2), Brachiopoda. Palaeontologica Indica Memoir, Ser. 13, 1:547610.Google Scholar
Wang, Y., and Zhu, R. 1979. Beiliuan (middle Middle Devonian) brachiopods from South Guizhou and Central Guangxi. Palaeontologia Sinica, 158(15):195.Google Scholar
Wood, E. 1901. Marcellus (Stafford) Limestones of Lancaster, Erie County, New York. New York State Museum Bulletin, 49:139181.Google Scholar