Observations on some Actinoporellas (Chlorophyta, Polyphysaceae). Revision of the Jacques Emberger Collection. Part 1
Author(s) -
Bruno Granier
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
carnets de géologie (notebooks on geology)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.263
H-Index - 15
eISSN - 1765-2553
pISSN - 1634-0744
DOI - 10.4267/2042/70196
Subject(s) - ascription , genus , sensu , cretaceous , paleontology , synonym (taxonomy) , cyclops , type (biology) , genealogy , zoology , biology , history , philosophy , ecology , linguistics
On the occasion of the inventory of the J. Emberger Collection, specimens from the "Lower Cretaceous" (Valanginian and Hauterivian) of Algeria, which are referable to the genus Actinoporella (Gumbel in Alth) and which were earlier identified to its type-species A. podolica (Alth) by Conrad et al., are re-examined. They correspond to two discrete species, one of which could be a junior synonym of A. podolica, a synonymy that remains pending because it would require a new sampling at the original locality in western Ukraine some 140 years after the original specimens, now lost, were collected. Regarding their age ascription, they are Tithonian and/or Berriasian in age, i.e., latest Jurassic (sensu Oppel) in age, not earliest Cretaceous. In addition to these two Actinoporellas, a third discrete species, initially described as Clypeina nigra (Conrad & Peybernes), but later referred to the genus Actinoporella, is revised. New data justify its re-ascription to the genus Bakalovaella Bucur. Finally, it is now confirmed that both the Polyphysaceae and the modern Dasycladaceae derive from the Diploporaceae either directly or indirectly through the ancestral Dasycladaceae.
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