Morphology and phylogenetic origin of the spinicaudatan Neodiestheria from the Lower Cretaceous Dalazi Formation, Yanji Basin, north-eastern China

Gang Li, Tohre Ohta, David Batten, Takashi Sakai, Takeshi Kozai

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The spinicaudatan Neodiestheria Chen is an important component of the diverse Early Cretaceous Yanjiestheria fauna in eastern Asia. Examination under a scanning electron microscope of newly collected and well-preserved specimens of Neodiestheria dalaziensis Chen from the Albian Dalazi Formation of Zhixin, Jilin Province, north-eastern China, has revealed morphological features of the carapace not recognized previously, namely that puncta are not only evenly distributed on growth bands near the umbo and gradually merge into a punctate fine reticulation and dense radial lirae on each growth band in the upper-middle part of the carapace, but also occur on growth lines and within the lumina of a fine reticulum, and between radial lirae on growth bands in the middle and lower parts of the carapace. Growth bands in anteroventral, ventral and posteroventral parts of the carapace are also ornamented with transversely elongate large pits (depressions) surrounded by swellings, appearing as a large reticulum superimposed over fine reticulation and radial lirae. These ontogenetically developing morphological patterns on the growth bands of the juvenile stage of the carapace indicate that Neodiestheria is closely related phylogenetically to Triglypta Wang.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)183-193
Number of pages11
JournalCretaceous Research
Volume62
Early online date11 Nov 2015
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01 Jul 2016

Keywords

  • clam shrimps
  • Neodiestheria
  • palaeontology
  • lower cretaceous
  • Dalazi Formation
  • China

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Morphology and phylogenetic origin of the spinicaudatan Neodiestheria from the Lower Cretaceous Dalazi Formation, Yanji Basin, north-eastern China'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this