The family Chaperiidae reaches its highest biodiversity in the southern hemisphere. The main morphological feature characterizing the family is a pair of calcareous laminar structures associated with the insertion of the operculum occlusor muscles. The aim of this study is to describe Aluis spinettai gen. et sp. nov., from material collected in the Monte León, the Chenque, and the Puesto del Museo formations (early Miocene, Patagonia, Argentina). A. spinettai has erect bilaminar colonies, crenulated sutures between zooids, an extensive cryptocyst and spherical ovicells; gymnocyst, oral spines, and avicularia are absent. The new species exhibits a remarkable morphological convergence with a species of Aspidostoma from the early Miocene (Chenque Formation) of Patagonia. In some areas of the colony, the cryptocysts were pierced by circular drill holes made by an unknown predator. The stratigraphic distribution of A. spinettai ranges from ∼19 to 17 Ma (Burdigalian). Its presence suggests a correlation between the upper levels of the Monte León Formation and the lower levels of the Chenque Formation. The paleogeographic distribution of this new species spans at least 500 km along the southern Atlantic coast of South America. The living representatives of the Chaperiidae in the Southwest Atlantic do not seem related to A. spinettai.
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9 September 2019
A New Genus and Species of Chaperiidae (Bryozoa: Cheilostomata) from the Early Miocene of Patagonia (Argentina)
Juan López-Gappa,
Leandro M. Pérez
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Ameghiniana
Vol. 56 • No. 5
December 2019
Vol. 56 • No. 5
December 2019
Cheilostome bryozoan
Chenque Formation
Monte León Formation
Predatory drill holes
Puesto del Museo Formation