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Early Ordovician ostracods from Argentina: their bearing on the origin of binodicope and palaeocope clades

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 July 2015

María José Salas
Affiliation:
Centro de Investigaciones Paleobiológicas CIPAL, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba, Avenida Vélez Sarsfield 299, 5000 Córdoba, Argentina, 〈[email protected]
Jean Vannier
Affiliation:
Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, UFR des Sciences de la Terre, UMR 5125 PEPS Paleoenvironnements & Paleobiosphere, GEODE—2, rue Raphael Dubois, 69622 Villeurbanne cedex, France, 〈[email protected]
Mark Williams
Affiliation:
School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Portsmouth, Burnaby Building, Burnaby Road, Portsmouth PO1 3QL, United Kingdom, 〈[email protected]

Abstract

New species of ostracods are described from the Tremadoc of the Cordillera Oriental (Argentina). These are among the earliest well-documented records of Ostracoda sensu stricto. The ostracod assemblages are sourced from shallow marine clastics and are dominated by palaeocopes (Eopilla waisfeldae n. sp., Nanopsis coquena n. sp.), and the binodicope Kimsella luciae n. gen. and sp. Eopilla and Kimsella show affinities with species from paleocontinental Gondwana (e.g., Ibero-Armorica, Turkey, Australia, Carnic Alps), but Nanopsis is previously known only from paleocontinental Baltica. This study confirms that two of the major clades of Ordovician ostracods, namely the Binodicopa and the Palaeocopa, were already geographically widespread during the late Tremadoc, suggesting a still earlier origin for these groups, possibly from within the Cambrian to Early Ordovician Bradoriida. Evidence from soft-part anatomy indicates that phosphatocopids, the other group hypothesized to be ancestral ostracods, have apomorphies that preclude them as direct ancestors. The origin of ostracods is more likely to be found within the Bradoriida, a probable polyphyletic group that resembles Early Ordovician ostracods in the external sculpture of their bivalved carapace. Evidence from carapace morphology suggests that the ancestors of true ostracods might lie within the bradoriid groups Beyrichonidae and Hipponicharionidae, a hypothesis that can only truly be tested when more evidence from fossilized soft tissues becomes available.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

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