A new family of Cambrian rhynchonelliformean brachiopods (Order Naukatida) with an aberrant coral‐like morphology

59 2 March 269 293 10.1111/pala.12226

STRENG, M., BUTLER, A.D., PEEL, J.S., GARWOOD, R.J., CARON, J. 2016. A new family of Cambrian rhynchonelliformean brachiopods (Order Naukatida) with an aberrant coral‐like morphology. Palaeontology, 59, 2, 269-293. DOI: 10.1111/pala.12226

Michael Streng, Aodhán D. Butler, John S. Peel, Russell J. Garwood, and Jean‐Bernard Caron
  • Michael Streng - Uppsala University Department of Earth Sciences (Palaeobiology) Uppsala Sweden (Email: michael.streng@geo.uu.se)
  • Aodhán D. Butler - Uppsala University Department of Earth Sciences (Palaeobiology) Uppsala Sweden (Email: aodhan.butler@geo.uu.se)
  • John S. Peel - Uppsala University Department of Earth Sciences (Palaeobiology) Uppsala Sweden (Email: john.peel@pal.uu.se)
  • Russell J. Garwood - The University of Manchester School of Earth, Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences Manchester UK (Email: russell.garwood@manchester.ac.uk)
  • Jean‐Bernard Caron - Royal Ontario Museum Department of Natural History (Palaeobiology Section) Toronto Ontario Canada (Email: jcaron@rom.on.ca)
  • Jean‐Bernard Caron - University of Toronto Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Toronto Ontario Canada
  • Jean‐Bernard Caron - University of Toronto Department of Earth Sciences Toronto Ontario Canada
  • Issue published online: 13 February 2016
  • Article first published online: 01 January 1970
  • Manuscript Accepted: 03 December 2015
  • Manuscript Received: 25 August 2015
Uppsala University Swedish Research Council. Grant Number: 621‐2011‐4961 EPSRC. Grant Numbers: EP/F007906/1, EP/F001452/1, EP/I02249X/1

Tomteluva perturbata gen. et sp. nov. and Nasakia thulensis gen. et sp. nov., two new rhynchonelliformean brachiopod taxa, are described from carbonate beds from the lower middle Cambrian (Series 3, Stage 5) basinal Stephen Formation, Canada, and the upper lower Cambrian (Series 2, Stage 4) Henson Gletscher Formation, North Greenland, respectively. The two taxa are characterized by an unusual coral‐like morphology typified by a high conical ventral valve with an anteriorly curved umbo and a tube‐like structure inside the ventral valve, interpreted as pedicle tube. Both resemble the problematic late middle Cambrian (Drumian) species Anomalocalyx cawoodi Brock from Australia, whose systematic affiliation is controversial. Together, the three genera are interpreted as representatives of a new family of rhynchonelliformean brachiopods, the Tomteluvidae fam. nov., which is interpreted as an aberrant or derived taxon within the Order Naukatida. Convergence between the Tomteluvidae and the coralla of small solitary Cambrian coralimorphs, as well as the late Palaeozoic reef‐building richthofenioid brachiopods, might indicate adaptation to a similar life habits and environments. However, their small size (length 4 mm), well‐developed pedicle and perfect morphological symmetry make it more likely that tomteluvids lived attached to frondose algae or sponges, above the seafloor, in a similar fashion to the acrotretoid brachiopods with which they show a high degree of morphological convergence. Morphological features of the pedicle tube of N. thulensis suggest that the tomteluvid pedicle is homologous to that in modern rhynchonelliformean brachiopods. This is the first evidence of the pedicle type within the Naukatida and represents the oldest confirmation of a rhynchonellate pedicle.

Data for this study are available in the Dryad Digital Repository http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.rd247 Wiley Online Library (Open Access)