Introduction
Spinicaudatans have been important components of lacustrine ecosystems since the late Paleozoic (Park and Gierlowski-Kordesch, Reference Park and Gierlowski-Kordesch2007). Spinicaudatan fossils are significant paleoenvironmental indicators; because most species only occupy ephemeral pools of freshwater, their presence indicates a seasonal climate (Vannier et al., Reference Vannier, Thiéry and Racheboeuf2003). In addition, this clade is widely used for continental biostratigraphy in Mesozoic strata (Shen et al., Reference Shen, Gallego and Martı́nez2004; Kozur and Weems, Reference Kozur and Weems2010). Paradoxically, even though the number of preserved lake deposits increases during the Cenozoic relative to the Mesozoic (Gierlowski-Kordesch and Kelts, Reference Gierlowski-Kordesch and Kelts2000), the Cenozoic record of spinicaudatans is extremely sparse. To date, no spinicaudatan species have been formally described from Neogene strata and fewer than ten spinicaudatan occurrences have been described globally from Paleogene strata (listed in Shen et al., Reference Shen, Gallego, Buchheim and Biaggi2006). The substantial gap in the fossil record of spinicaudatans limits the ability to make inferences about the evolutionary history of the clade. Mesozoic faunas included many spinicaudatan families reflecting greater diversity and disparity than represented among the three modern families. It is currently unclear whether spinicaudatan diversity declined due to the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction, climatic or tectonic changes in the early Cenozoic, and/or preservational bias. The new species described herein is the first record of a fossil spinicaudatan species from the Cenozoic of North America. We discuss the preservation, evolutionary implications, and ecological interpretations of these new specimens.
Geologic setting
The fossil spinicaudatans were collected from the early Oligocene Medicine Lodge Formation in Beaverhead County, Montana (Fig. 1) by J.B. Orr during the 1960s. The specimens described herein were collected from a single locality along a small bluff on Anton Creek (Sec. 27, 28, T11S, R12), which the authors georeferenced to 44.8527 latitude, -113.0239 longitude, uncertainly 210 m.
The Medicine Lodge Formation and associated sedimentary units within the Beaverhead Basin include interbedded thin-to-thick shales and sandstones, including a basal conglomerate and a localized coal layer near the top, with noticeable vertical and lateral variations (Scholten et al., Reference Scholten, Keenmon and Kupsch1955; Becker, Reference Becker1969; DeVore and Pigg, Reference DeVore and Pigg2010; Lielke et al., Reference Lielke, Manchester and Meyer2012). These facies represent fluvial, lacustrine, fan-delta, and paludal facies (M’Gonigle and Darymple, 1996) that were deposited within a structural basin bounded by the hanging wall of a Paleogene low-angle fault on the west and the low-angle normal fault to the east (Scholten et al., Reference Scholten, Keenmon and Kupsch1955; Becker, Reference Becker1969; DeVore and Pigg, Reference DeVore and Pigg2010; Lielke et al., Reference Lielke, Manchester and Meyer2012). Based on paleobotanical data (e.g., Scholten et al., Reference Scholten, Keenmon and Kupsch1955; Becker, Reference Becker1969; DeVore and Pigg, Reference DeVore and Pigg2010; Lielke et al., Reference Lielke, Manchester and Meyer2012), the basin was estimated to have an elevation of ~1600 m above sea level.
Becker (Reference Becker1969) described three florules from Paleogene basin-lake deposits in Beaverhead County, Montana: the Christensen, Horse Prairie, and Medicine Lodge florules. The Medicine Lodge Florule is the youngest of these and crops out along several adjacent tributaries of Medicine Lodge Creek. The age of the Medicine Lodge Formation is constrained by radiometric dates and refined using biotic data. Tuffs at the base of the sedimentary sequence at Medicine Lodge and Horse Prairie Basins exhibit ages of 46.04±0.15 Ma to 45.0±0.13 Ma, indicating the initiation of basin fill during the middle Eocene (M’Gonigle and Dalrymple, Reference M’Gonigle and Dalrymple1993, Reference M’Gonigle and Dalrymple1996), whereas overlying basalts have been dated at 27.5 Ma (late Oligocene; Janecke et al., Reference Janecke, Mcintosh and Good1999). Within this constraint, Lielke et al. (Reference Lielke, Manchester and Meyer2012) determined that the preponderance of the evidence, including floral similarity with other sites, was consistent with an earliest Oligocene age (Rupelian Stage, Orellan NALMA) for the three florules described by Becker (Reference Becker1969).
The Medicine Lodge Formation preserves a diverse biotic assemblage. The described flora contains 94 species belonging to 66 genera, including both dicots and conifers, representing a mixed forest biome (Wing, Reference Wing1987; Graham, Reference Graham1999; DeVore and Pigg, Reference DeVore and Pigg2010). In addition to the spinicaudatans, the invertebrate component of the fauna includes insects (including caddisfly larval cases), freshwater gastropods tentatively assigned to Planorbidae, the bivalve Sphaerium sp., and several species of ostracodes (Becker, Reference Becker1969; Lewis, Reference Lewis1972). Vertebrates include relatively common fish scales and rare articulated specimens provisionally assigned to Hiodontidae and Catostomidae. With the exception of an abstract by Cavender (Reference Cavender1977), the fish fauna remains undescribed. Becker (Reference Becker1969) also mentioned the presence of large, unidentified mammal bones.
Materials and methods
Spinicaudatan specimens were examined using light and scanning electron microscopy. SEM analyses were conducted using a JEOL JSM-6390 at the Ohio University Institute for Corrosion and Multiphase Technology under low vacuum conditions. Preservation was assessed via energy dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) equipment, Genesis from EDAX.
Repositories and institutional abbreviations
This collection was made by J.B. Orr for an unfinished thesis at the University of Chicago sometime in the 1960s and had been in storage at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) since that time. All materials from the Orr collection at UIC, including those examined herein, have been transferred to Yale Peabody Museum (YPM), which also houses extensive paleobotanical collections from the same locality that were transferred from the New York Botanical Gardens.
Systematic paleontology
Phylum Arthropoda von Siebold, 1848
Subphylum Eucrustacea Walossek, Reference Walossek1999
Class Branchiopoda Latreille, Reference Latreille1817
Order Diplostraca Gerstaecker, Reference Gerstaecker1866
Remarks
Spinicaudata, Laevicaudata, and Cyclestherida were once united in the paraphyletic “order Conchostraca.” Recent phylogenetic analyses (e.g., Richter et al., Reference Richter, Olesen and Wheeler2007; Olesen, Reference Olesen2009) have cogently demonstrated that this grouping is paraphyletic. However, the monophyly of the Spinicaudata, which includes the vast majority of “clam shrimp,” is firmly established (e.g., Olesen, Reference Olesen2000, Reference Olesen2009; Stenderup et al., Reference Stenderup, Olesen and Glenner2006; Richter et al., Reference Richter, Olesen and Wheeler2007; Schwentner et al., Reference Schwentner, Timms, Bastrop and Richter2009). A recent review by Astrop and Hegna (Reference Astrop and Hegna2015) examined the relationships among living and fossil spinicaudatans, and their recommendations are followed herein. The systematic terminology used herein follows that of Olesen (Reference Olesen2000) and Martin and Davis (Reference Martin and Davis2001) for higher-level classification and follows Chen and Shen (Reference Chen and Shen1985) for superfamilial and lower levels. Measurements and terminology of carapace features follow Tasch (Reference Tasch1987).
As implied by common name “clam shrimp,” conchostracans are sometimes mistaken for bivalves and vice versa due to their similar gross morphologies of bivalved shells with concentric growth lines. The lightly biomineralized chitinous carapace, ornamentation and growth patterns, and life habits of conchostracans produce a suite of features that allow confident differentiation, many of which are described by Tasch (Reference Tasch1987). Conchostracan valves typically do not disarticulate post-mortem and frequently are preserved overlapping on bedding planes with conspicuous wrinkles due to desiccation and compaction (e.g., Figs. 2.5, 3.1, 5.1; Li and Batten, Reference Li and Batten2005, figs. 3, 4; Shen et al., Reference Shen, Gallego, Buchheim and Biaggi2006, fig. 4; Stigall et al., Reference Stigall, Hembree, Gierlowski-Kordesch and Weismiller2014, fig. 5). Conchostracan carapaces range from elongate to ovate, but in general are characterized by a narrower anterior and a broader posterior angle (see Chen and Shen, Reference Chen and Shen1985; Tasch, Reference Tasch1987; Scholze and Schneider, Reference Scholze and Schneider2015). Conchostracan growth bands are thickest and often more strongly preserved at the distal margin (e.g., Fig. 5.1, 5.2, 5.5; Orr et al., Reference Orr, Briggs and Kearns2008, fig. 5; Astrop and Hegna, Reference Astrop and Hegna2015, fig. 4). Outer layers of carapace growth bands are often replaced or remineralized in patches or as overgrowths (e.g., Fig. 3.1, 3.3; Shen et al., Reference Shen, Gallego, Buchheim and Biaggi2006, fig. 4; Stigall et al., Reference Stigall, Babcock, Briggs and Leslie2008, figs. 6, 12; Gallego et al., Reference Gallego, Cabaleri, Armella, Volkheimer, Ballent, Martínez, Monferran, Silva Nieto and Páez2011, fig. 5). Growth bands frequently appear to be shingled along the distal carapace margin (e.g., Fig. 4.1; Stigall et al., Reference Stigall, Hembree, Gierlowski-Kordesch and Weismiller2014, figs. 5, 6) and sometimes include radial canals (lirae) or serrations for setal exit (e.g., Fig. 4.7; Li and Batten, Reference Li and Batten2005, fig. 3; Boukhalfa et al., Reference Boukhalfa, Li, Ben Ali and Soussi2015, fig. 4). Finally, conchostracans rarely occur in isolation; they more typically occur in massive bedding-plane concentrations (e.g., Fig. 5.3; Monferran et al., Reference Monferran, Gallego, Astrop and Cabaleri2013, fig. 3). The specimens described herein meet each of these criteria for inclusion within the “Conchostraca.”
Suborder Spinicaudata Linder, Reference Linder1945
Superfamily Estheriteoidea Zhang and Chen in Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Chen and Shen1976
Family Estheriteidae Zhang and Chen in Zhang et al.,Reference Zhang, Chen and Shen1976
Genus Estherites? Kobayashi and Huzita, Reference Kobayashi and Huzita1943
Type species
Estheria mitsuishii (Kobayashi and Huzita, Reference Kobayashi and Huzita1942) Kobayashi and Huzita, Reference Kobayashi and Huzita1943 from the Upper Cretaceous (Conianian), Nenjiang Formation, Jilin Province, northeast China.
Diagnosis
From Li and Batten (Reference Li and Batten2005). Carapace of moderate size, gently convex, elliptical or elongate-subquadrate in outline. Umbo projecting somewhat beyond dorsal margin; growth bands ornamented by fine lirae that are connected by bars in various directions on ventral part of carapace; those on dorsal side sculptured only with fine radial lirae.
Occurrence
Triassic? or Cretaceous through Oligocene of China, Japan, South Korea and western North America.
Remarks
Estherites is a genus of ~15 species of relatively small (typically 4–10 mm in length) spinicaudatans characterized by an oval to elliptical carapace with a subcentally located umbo (Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Chen and Shen1976). Growth bands are typically wide throughout much of the carapace and may narrow in the distal third. The umbonal region is ornamented with punctae, which align into weak radial lirae near the dorsal margin. In some species, such as E. corrugatus, ornamentation is weakly impressed throughout the carapace. Growth band count varies from relatively few (~12) to many (40+). A comprehensive species list with associated references is provided in Li and Batten (Reference Li and Batten2005).
The Medicine Lodge spinicaudatans exhibit most of the key diagnostic features of Estherites including size, elliptical shape, carapace ratios, number and width of growth bands, and weakly impressed ornamentation in the umbonal region with lirae expressed at the distal margin. The lirae and radial ornamentation are very weakly developed in this new species, which may be a taphonomic artifact or may indicate that the Medicine Lodge specimens belong to a new, yet undescribed genus. At this point, we prefer to assign the new species to Estherites while noting this uncertainty because the carapace microstructure of specimens is not preserved well enough to definitively either include or exclude the new species from Estherites. In either case, the Medicine Lodge spinicaudatans are clearly referable to the family Estheriteidae. The documentation of this new species extends the geologic range of the Estheriteidae and places it among the very few clamp shrimp taxa known from Cenozoic strata. Among “conchostracans,” only members of the spinicaudatan families Fushunograptidae, Loxomegaglyptidae, and Perilimnadiidae, the laevicaudatan family Lynceidae, and the cyclestherid family Cylclestheriidae have previously been documented from Cenozoic deposits (Shen et al., Reference Shen, Gallego, Buchheim and Biaggi2006).
Estherites? jocelynae Stigall new species
Holotype
YPM 531187, complete right carapace valve (holotype); YPM 531188, left valve; 531189, left valve, 531190, complete left valve (paratypes). All type material was collected from the Anton Creek Locality of the early Oligocene (Rupelian Stage, Orellan NALMA), Medicine Lodge Formation, Beaverhead Basin, MT.
Diagnosis
Thin carapace valves of medium size, elliptical to ovate in outline, umbo centrally located, extending slightly above hinge line; height to length ratio from 0.7 to 0.9, valve convexity moderate; growth bands of two orders: flat growth bands ~0.4 mm wide in umbonal and central carapace, and rounded growth bands ~0.04 mm (40 μm) wide at distal margin. Weak radial lirae and wrinkles present on dorsal growth bands.
Occurrence
Early Oligocene (Rupelian Stage, Orellan NALMA), Medicine Lodge Formation, Beaverhead Basin, MT. Orr’s Anton Creek Locality, Sec. 27, 28, T11S, R12; 44.8527 N latitude, -113.0239 W longitude, uncertainty 210 m.
Description
Carapace valves of moderate size and elliptical to oval in outline. Mean carapace length and height are 3.89 mm (range: 1.94–5.87 mm) and 3.13 mm (range: 1.53–5.06 mm), respectively (Table 1). The L/H ratio averages 0.81 (range: 0.70–0.90). Carapace growth is isometric (Fig. 6). Dorsal margin is weakly curved and relatively short (typically less than half of the valve length) with umbo centrally located. Anterior margin shorter and more tightly rounded than posterior. Maximum anterior bulge is approximately 0.38x distance from hinge line to ventral margin, and maximum posterior bulge located approximately 0.43x distance from hinge line to ventral margin. Maximum ventral bulge is located slightly anterior of center, approximately 0.38x distance from anterior to posterior of carapace.
Moldic specimens and those with preserved carapace valves exteriors record an average of eight (range: 7–14) flat growth bands ~0.4 mm wide (e.g., Figs. 2.3, 3.1, 5.1, 5.5). The distal margins of these growth bands are demarcated by a topographic impression within the mold and/or a thickened region of preserved carapace. Many specimens preserve an internal mold of the carapace valve (e.g., Figs. 2.4, 2.7, 5.2, 5.3, 5.4, 5.6) and, consequently, do not preserve any external ornament. One specimen (YPM 531189, Fig. 2.5, 2.8, 2.14) represents a carapace exterior and preserves a series of narrow concentric bands throughout the carapace, which suggests development of narrower growth bands mediodistally. Limited regions around the extreme distal margins of some specimens, notably specimens of the type series, preserve sets of narrow growth bands, ~40 μm wide, as siliceous molds (Figs. 2.13, 2.14, 3.5). Weakly preserved ornamentation patterns of radial lirae and concentric wrinkles are present on some of these narrow, extreme-distal growth bands (Fig. 4.5). There is no evidence for radial ornamentation in the umbo or central region of specimens where that region has been preserved as a siliceous mold. The preservation of a consistent number of wide growth bands among internal molds coupled with the occasionally preserved narrow bands suggests that two stages of concentric band development occurred during ontogeny.
Etymology
Named after Jocelyn Ann Hembree.
Materials
Type material and 26 additional specimens (YPM 531191–531203, 531205–531214, 531217–531219). Additional morphological details of the types and other material are presented in the Appendix.
Remarks
Estherites? jocelynae n. sp. exhibits the key morphological and ornamentation features of Estherites noted above. However, it is distinguished from all previously named species based on the carapace size and the number and width of growth bands. The maximum carapace length of E.? jocelynae is smaller than all other species of Estherites, except for Estherites? minutus Zhang and Chen in Zhang, Chen, and Shen, Reference Zhang, Chen and Shen1976, which reaches a maximum length of 4.0 mm. Estherites? jocelynae n. sp. can be distinguished from E.? minutus due to its more circular shape, larger size, higher H/L ratio (0.81 vs. 0.73), more centrally located umbo, narrower distal growth bands, and wider medial growth bands. In addition, other species attributed to Estherites have more pronounced or larger radial lirae, course meshwork as part of their ornament, substantially larger carapace size, and/or an anteriorly (rather than centrally) positioned umbo.
Preservation
Specimens of Estherites? jocelynae n. sp. are preserved as combinations of fossilized carapace material and corresponding molds of the carapace interior and exterior surfaces (e.g., Fig. 2.1). Where present, the carapace material is preserved as a white opaque mineral that may be tinted orange (e.g., Fig. 2.2). Spectra obtained from EDAX analyses indicate that the white mineral is composed primarily of calcium ions with minor peaks at carbon and oxygen and accessory peaks for iron, silica, and aluminum (Figs. 3, 4). This carbonate-dominated composition differs from the elemental composition of the sedimentary background, in which calcium is negligible and aluminum and silicon ions are abundant (Fig. 4). The carbonate preservation also differs from the presumed chitin-calcium-phosphate composition of the original carapace material (for discussion of modern spinicaudatan carapace composition see Stigall et al., Reference Stigall, Babcock, Briggs and Leslie2008; Astrop et al., Reference Astrop, Sahni, Blackledge and Stark2015). This indicates the fossils represent replaced rather than recrystallized carapace material. In regions where a detailed mold of the carapace exterior is preserved (e.g., Figs. 2.13, 4.4–4.6), silicon is the primary ion (Fig. 3.3). Similar high-fidelity preservation via silica molds has been documented in other spinicaudatans, such as Carapacestheria disgregaris from the Jurassic of Antarctica (Stigall et al., Reference Stigall, Babcock, Briggs and Leslie2008).
Compared to other fossil spinicaudatan carapaces, the preservation of the Beaverhead Basin specimens is unusual. Notably, although hundreds of fossil spinicaudatan species have been described, the elemental composition of carapaces has been explicitly tested for fewer than ten species. Thus sets of the comparative data are extremely limited. Most fossil species for which carapace compositions have been analyzed via EDAX are within the ‘Estheriteoidea-Eosestheriodidea’ group, and their carapaces have reported to be preserved primarily as recrystallized calcium phosphate or silica molds. This group includes Triassic specimens from Poland (Olempska, Reference Olempska2004), Jurassic specimens from Antarctica (Stigall et al., Reference Stigall, Babcock, Briggs and Leslie2008), Namibia (Stigall et al., Reference Stigall, Hembree, Gierlowski-Kordesch and Weismiller2014), and China (Hethke et al., Reference Hethke, Fürsich, Jiang and Pan2013), and Cretaceous specimens of Madagascar (Stigall and Hartman, Reference Stigall and Hartman2008). Another identified mode of spinicaudatan preservation, specifically related to exceptional preservation of soft tissues and appendages, is as organic-carbon residues associated with phyllosilicates (Orr and Briggs, Reference Orr and Briggs1999). Carbonate preservation of spinicaudatans has only previously been reported from the Jurassic specimens of western North America (Lucas and Milner, Reference Lucas and Milner2006). Notably, both carbonate and organic-carbon preservation result in lower resolution of carapace details than preservation as recrystallized calcium phosphate or silicic molds.
Although studies of spinicaudatan carapace taphonomy are limited, carbonate replacement or preservation has been studied within both arthropods and vertebrates preserved in freshwater environments. Calcium carbonate precursors have been observed to form from the breakdown of organic matter in aqueous solution (Berner, Reference Berner1968) and have been implicated in the development of concretions as well as exoskeleton and soft-tissue replacement in insects and shrimp (McCobb et al., Reference McCobb, Duncan, Jarzembowski, Stankiewicz, Wills and Briggs1998; Sageman et al., 1999; Park and Downing, Reference Park and Downing2001; Martínez-Delclòs et al., Reference Martínez-Delclòs, Briggs and Peñalver2004). The degree that phosphate is replaced by carbonate within vertebrate bioapatite has been shown to vary among depositional environments due to local geochemical conditions (Keenan et al., Reference Keenan, Engel, Roy and Bovenkamp-Langlois2015), variations in pH (Sagemann et al., Reference Sagemann, Bale, Briggs and Parkes1999), or as a byproduct of bioerosion by aquatic microorganisms (Fernández-Jalvo et al., Reference Fernández-Jalvo, Pesquero and Tormo2016). In some instances (e.g., Fernández-Jalvo et al., Reference Fernández-Jalvo, Pesquero and Tormo2016), bones have been replaced with a chalky version of calcium cabonate that closely resembles the preservation style of E.? jocelynae n. sp. Because spinicaudatan carapaces are primarily chitin interlayered with limited bioapatite (~5% phosphate compared to ~40% in vertebrates), it is likely that low pH lake waters or early diagenetic processes, including bioerosion, could have removed the phosphate and facilitated later carbonate precipitation within voids held open by the chitin remnants. The atypical preservation exhibited by E.? jocelynae n. sp., therefore, may have been facilitated by specific geochemical or microbial conditions within the depositional environment. Additional analyses on preservation of the spinicaudatan and associated fauna of the Beaverhead Basin are in progress to investigate the relationship between preservation and geochemistry in more detail.
Evolutionary and environmental significance
Clam shrimp are common in lacustrine deposits of late Paleozoic and Mesozoic age, but rarely have been reported from Cenozoic strata (see Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, Chen and Shen1976; Chen and Shen, Reference Chen and Shen1981; Shen et al., Reference Shen, Gallego, Buchheim and Biaggi2006; Gallego and Mesquita, Reference Gallego and Mesquita2010). The only previously described Cenozoic clam shrimp from North American are two species from the Eocene Green River Formation (Shen et al., Reference Shen, Gallego, Buchheim and Biaggi2006). These species, Cyclesteriodes wyomingensis and Prolynceus laneynsis, are members of the orders Cyclestheriida and Laevicaudata, respectively. Thus, Estherites? jocelynae n. sp. is the first spinicaudatan “conchostracan” described from the Cenozoic of North America. Estherites? jocelynae n. sp. is also the second youngest clam shrimp to have been described globally—only Paraleptestheria menglaensis (Gallego and Mesquita, Reference Gallego and Mesquita2010) from the late Oligocene of Brazil is younger.
All other species of Estherites are known from older deposits of northeast Asia, thus the presence of E.? jocelynae n. sp. in the Oligocene deposits of the Beaverhead basin suggests that the ancestors of this species dispersed to North America from Asia. Lielke et al. (Reference Lielke, Manchester and Meyer2012) documented an increase in the number of plant species of East Asian affinity within the Medicine Lodge Formation, and the spinicaudatans may have utilized the same dispersal pathway. Estherites? jocelynae n. sp. is also the youngest species of this genus and demonstrates the persistence of this clade beyond the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction.
Spinicaudatans are explicit environmental indicators because they are restricted to freshwater habitats that exhibit seasonal fluctuations in water availability (Thiéry, Reference Thiéry1996; Vannier et al., Reference Vannier, Thiéry and Racheboeuf2003). As part of their reproductive pathway, many spinicaudatans species produce cysts that must undergo drying before hatching can occur (Thiéry, Reference Thiéry1996; Vannier et al., Reference Vannier, Thiéry and Racheboeuf2003). Thus the basic life-history attributes of spinicaudatans match the highly seasonal, summer dry climate with a mean summer temperate of 30.5°C reconstructed by Lielke et al. (Reference Lielke, Manchester and Meyer2012) for the Beaverhead Basin quite well.
Additional fauna from the spinicaudatan-bearing locality provides further insight to the depositional environment. The presence of fish remains, ostracodes (Fig. 5.5, 5.9), insects—including caddisfly cases (Fig. 5.9), bivalves, and freshwater gastropods (Fig. 5.8) indicates that portions of the lake retained water year-round, although water levels likely fluctuated, allowing marginal regions to dry enough for spinicaudatan cyst development. The presence of a limited number of Planolites burrows (Fig. 5.7, 5.11) indicates that deposit feeders were present, but uncommon on the lake bottom. A fairly limited infaunal population would have facilitated the preservation of the relatively delicate spinicaudatan carapaces.
Conclusions
With the exception of Paraleptestheria menglaensis (Gallego and Mesquita, Reference Gallego and Mesquita2010) from the late Oligocene of Brazil, Estherites? jocelynae is the youngest clam shrimp described globally. This report is also the first occurrence of a spinicaudatan from the Cenozoic of North America. The description of E.? jocelynae n. sp. extends the range of the superfamily Estheriteoidea into the Paleogene. The range extension, coupled with the unusual preservation style of E.? jocelynae n. sp. carapaces, suggests that the weak Cenozoic record of Spinicaudata may be related to preservation bias or perhaps changes in the distribution of lake environments, and thus the geochemistry of lakes, from the Mesozoic to Cenozoic. The presence of E.? jocelynae n. sp. in the Medicine Lodge Formation supports the interpretation that Beaverhead Basin experienced strongly seasonal climate, as inferred from paleobotanical proxies.
Acknowledgments
Useful feedback on an earlier version of this manuscript was provided by C. Haug and T. Hegna. We thank J. Hartman, D. Hembree, and S. Wing for assistance with identifications. J. Utrup and S. Butts at YPM provided access to their collections and assistance with specimen curation. F. Farelas provided ESEM access at the Ohio University Institute for Corrosion and Multiphase Technology.
Accessibility of supplemental data
Data available from the Dryad Digital Repository : http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.8217f
Appendix
Appendix 1. Morphological characteristics of specimens examined. (Data available from the Dryad Digital Repository : http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.8217f.)