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Vol 53, No 11 (2019)

Article

Evolutionary Developmental Biology: the Interaction of Developmental Biology, Evolutionary Biology, Paleontology, and Genomics

Ozernyuk N.D.

Abstract

Evolutionary developmental biology (evo-devo) formed due to the interactions of evolutionary biology, paleontology, and comparative genomics, analyzes the interrelations of ontogenetic and phylogenetic processes and, primarily, the influence of changes in individual development are under genetic control, and Hox genes play a decisive role in the determination of animal’s body plan. Both genetic and epigenetic mechanisms underlie the regulation of body plan formation in ontogeny and phylogeny, and the latter mechanisms ultimately determine the animal’s phenotype. Heterochronies, which create the differences between related taxa (species and genus), play an important role in the evolutionary transformations. Data from paleontology, evolutionary biology, and genomics enabled the construction of a phylogenetic system that includes the time of divergence of evolutionary branches of different ranks, in addition to the evolutionary innovations.

Paleontological Journal. 2019;53(11):1117-1133
pages 1117-1133 views

Conical Thecae of Precambrian Macroorganisms

Ivantsov A.Y., Vickers-Rich P., Zakrevskaya M.A., Hall M.

Abstract

On the basis of new extensive collections, made by the present authors, a group of unsegmented three-dimensional fossil remains from the Late Precambrian of Namibia and the southeastern White Sea area, including such genera as Protechiurus, Vendoglossa, and Vendoconularia, were restudied. It is established that the fossils belong to two morphologically close genera (Protechiurus and Vendoconularia), composing the new family Protechiuridae. It is possible that they represent the same genus or even species, but the incompleteness of the preservation of the Namibian member of the group prevents their integration. The fossils initially represented conical hollow elastic objects, hexagonal in the cross-section, which were open at the wide end and closed at the pointed end. The sculpture of their surface consisted of longitudinal ridges, both single and double, bounding the rows of the short transverse ridges, scalloped along one margin. Vendoconularia had wide plates which were attached to the cone outwardly along the longitudinal unpaired ridges. In general morphology and several details the fossils resemble the thecae of conulariids and anabaritids, known from Late Precambrian and Paleozoic and classified as the scyphozoan cnidarians. The main difference lays in the theca mineralization, which consists of phosphate in conulariids, carbonate in anabaritids, and is absent in the case of protechiurids. It is proposed that the protechiurids, which appeared in the fossil record first, may belong to the basal group of ancient scyphozoans, ancestral to the conulariids on the one hand, and to the anabaritids on the other.

Paleontological Journal. 2019;53(11):1134-1146
pages 1134-1146 views

New Data on Jurassic Cerithiopsidae (Gastropoda) from European Russia

Guzhov A.V.

Abstract

The Oxfordian–Kimmeridgian Cerithiopsidae, represented by two genera Cosmocerithium Cossmann, 1906 and Dragonia gen. nov. are re-investigated. Three species (C. renardi (Rouillier, 1849), C. pumilum (Gerasimov, 1992), and C. veliger sp. nov.), representing the same phylogenetic line, are distinguished in the genus Cosmocerithium. These species formed during the gradual morphological evolution, traced from the Middle Oxfordian to Early Kimmeridgian. The diagnosis of all Cosmocerithium species was revised and improved. As a result, the species C. contiae Guzhov, 2002 was included into synonymy of C. pumilum. Two new species are described in the composition of Dragonia: D. minuta sp. nov. (index species) and D. longa sp. nov. It is proposed that Cosmocerithium species were necrophages. It was revealed that Dragoniaminuta belongs to assemblages, which inhabited sunken wood and was able to bore wood fragments.

Paleontological Journal. 2019;53(11):1147-1161
pages 1147-1161 views

Heterobranchia (Gastropoda) from the Jurassic Deposits of Russia

Guzhov A.V.

Abstract

Small gastropods from the Jurassic deposits of the European Russia, united into the lower Heterobranchia or Allogastropoda, are described. The families of Ampezzanildidae, Cimidae, Cornirostridae, Ebalidae, and Stuoraxidae are distinguished, and a set of taxa is given without reference to a definite family. The family Ampezzanildidae from the Jurassic deposits is described for the first time on the basis of the mass material, ascribed to the new genus Zizipupa gen. nov. with the sole species of Z. costata sp. nov. The family Cimidae includes the genera of Cristalloella, Rotfanella, Urlocella, and Unzhispira gen. nov. with species C. spiralocostata (Gründel, 1998), R. gerasimovi sp. nov., R. reticulata sp. nov., Urlocella undulata sp. nov., and Unzhispira minuta sp. nov. The genus Heteronatica gen. nov. is included into the family Cornirostridae. This genus is the first siphonostomatous representative of the given family including the sole long-living species H. globosa sp. nov., which is subdivided into subspecies H. globosa globosa and H. globosapromota subsp. nov. The family Ebalidae is represented by the genus Ebala, shells of which are distributed from the Middle Oxfordian to the Middle Volgian. The family Stuoraxidae is described based on two genera Stuoraxis and Aneudaronia gen. nov., including species of S. crassa sp. nov. and A. elegans sp. nov. The genus Doggerostra, which fits into different families of Heterobranchia in terms of shell morphology is represented by the species D. riedeli Gründel, 1998, which was previously known from the Bathonian and Callowian deposits in Poland and Germany, as well as form the Upper Jurassic interval in the Russian Plate. The Middle Volgian subspecies D. riedeli affinis subsp. nov. is distinguished in the composition of this species. In addition, the genus Masaevia gen. nov. with the sole species of M. sinistra sp. nov. is described. Due to so specific shell morphology of this genus, its position in the Heterobranchia system is unclear. It is not improbable that we deal with small planktonic gastropods of protoconchs of unknown group of planktonic or benthic gastropods.

Paleontological Journal. 2019;53(11):1162-1187
pages 1162-1187 views

Ammonites and Stratigraphy of the Upper Bajocian Garantianagarantiana Zone in the Interfluve between the Kuban and Urup Rivers (Northern Caucasus)

Mitta V.V.

Abstract

This paper presents the results of the study of the Upper Bajocian Garantiana garantiana Zone (Middle Jurassic) and characteristic ammonites in sections of the basin of the Kuban River (Karachay-Cherkessia). The assemblage contains species of the genera Garantiana, Pseudogarantiana, Paragarantiana, Djanaliparkinsonia (all family Stephanoceratidae) and Vermisphinctes (family Perisphinctidae). A section of the Garantiana Zone on the Kyafar River contains (from bottom to top) Beds with Djanaliparkinsonia alanica (also recognized on the Kuban River), Beds with Garantiana subgaranti and Beds with Paragarantiana, approximately corresponding to the Dichotoma, Garantiana, and Tetragona subzones of the standard scale. Garantiana subgaranti Wetzel and Vermisphinctes martiusii (d’Orbigny) are described. Prorsisphinctes Buckman, 1921 is proposed as a junior subjective synonym of Vermisphinctes Buckman, 1920.

Paleontological Journal. 2019;53(11):1188-1202
pages 1188-1202 views

A New Genus and Species of Lymexylidae (Insecta: Coleoptera) from Mid-Cretaceous Amber of Northern Myanmar

Xinyu Chen .

Abstract

The ship-timber beetle Cretoquadratus engeli gen. et sp.n. has been described and classified based on a moderately well-preserved fossil specimen found inside mid-Cretaceous amber from the Hukawng Valley in northern Myanmar. The newly created taxon is placed within Atractocerinae, and the new species can be easily distinguished from all other extinct and recent members of the subfamily due to the presence of media veins and branches, including M1, M2, M3, and M4. Cretoquadratus engeli is the oldest known representative of (Atractocerinae) Lymexylidae, with the exception of Cratoatractocerus grimaldii Wolf-Schwenninger, 2011, which was deposited in the Lower Cretaceous of Brazil. The palaeobiomigratory significancehas been briefly discussed.

Paleontological Journal. 2019;53(11):1203-1205
pages 1203-1205 views

Protaxodioxylon from the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous Kota Formation, Pranhita-Godavari Basin, India

Chinnappa C.H., Kavali P.S., Rajanikanth A.

Abstract

The xylotomy of the silicified wood from the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous Kota Formation of the Pranhita-Godavari Basin is studied and its systematic affinity is identified here. The wood is characterised by distinct growth rings with mixed pitting on radial tracheid walls, and taxodioid cross-field pits. The combination of the features observed in the present wood indicates that, it belongs to Protaxodioxylon of the taxodiaceous Cupressaceae s. l., as a new species Protaxodioxylon sahnii sp. nov. The comparison of wood with the modern representatives of the family suggests its relation with Taxodium. The present fossil wood with distinct growth rings characterised by their low percentage of latewood suggests that the growth conditions were favorable. The riparian habitat was inferred for the Protaxodioxylon sahnii sp. nov., based on sedimentological and other associated plant fossils. The vegetation in the study area is possibly favored by the influence of a subtropical climate with seasons, and by high levels of precipitation along the river banks.

Paleontological Journal. 2019;53(11):1206-1215
pages 1206-1215 views

Middle Jurassic Plant Diversity and Climate in the Ordos Basin, China

Yun-Feng Li ., Wang H., Dilcher D.L., Bugdaeva E., Tan X., Li T., Na Y., Sun C.

Abstract

The Ordos Basin is one of the largest continental sedimentary basins and it represents one major and famous production area of coal, oil and gas resources in China. The Jurassic non-marine deposits are well developed and cropped out in the basin. The Middle Jurassic Yan’an Formation is rich in coal and contains diverse plant remains. We recognize 40 species in 25 genera belonging to mosses, horsetails, ferns, cycadophytes, ginkgoaleans, czekanowskialeans and conifers. This flora is attributed to the early Middle Jurassic Epoch, possibly the Aalenian-Bajocian. The climate of the Ordos Basin during the Middle Jurassic was warm and humid with seasonal temperature and precipitation fluctuations. The result tends to support the palaeophytogeographic/palaeoclimatic setting of the Ordos Basin in the North Floristic Province, or the North Chinese Province in the warm temperate zone during the Middle Jurassic.

Paleontological Journal. 2019;53(11):1216-1235
pages 1216-1235 views

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