Limopsidae DALL 1895

LIMOPSIDAE DALL, 1895 Thin shells of small to minute limopsid bivalves are rare in Cenozoic faunas of the Northeastern Pacific, occurring primarily in deep-water assemblages. Limopsids appear in the Jurassic (Bathonian), with a probable deeper arcidan ancestry in either the Grammatodontidae or Cucul...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hickman, Carole S.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2023
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11505105
http://treatment.plazi.org/id/C23987DDFFEA292EFEAAFB88EBCFB89E
Description
Summary:LIMOPSIDAE DALL, 1895 Thin shells of small to minute limopsid bivalves are rare in Cenozoic faunas of the Northeastern Pacific, occurring primarily in deep-water assemblages. Limopsids appear in the Jurassic (Bathonian), with a probable deeper arcidan ancestry in either the Grammatodontidae or Cucullaeidae. There was a minor limopsid radiation in the Cretaceous followed by subsequent decline as siphonate burrowing bivalves replaced taxa constrained by a nestling, byssate, semi-infaunal life habit. Although the thin aragonitic shells do not preserve well, the typical obliquely ovate shape of the shell, crenulate interior margin, compressed valves, straight hingeline, taxodont dentition, and finely-tessellated sculpture aid in recognition. The alivincular ligament in a central triangular resilifer, when preserved, is an aid in recognizing fossil limopsids. The dense covering of flat-lying, thatched periostracal bristles may aid in the initial preservation of buried shells and is sometimes expressed in external molds in fine-grained siltstone and mudstone. Although this is a relatively small family group with living diversity concentrated in the Antarctic, high southern latitudes, and deep sea, it has attracted considerable interest for subtle distinctions in shell shape, ligament, and anatomical features considered key to understanding arcidan evolution (Oliver 1981). The limopsoid ligament has figured in defining constraints on evolutionary diversification in arcidan bivalves as recorded in the fossil record (Thomas 1976). Considerable taxonomic confusion among living species has been resolved through detailed studies of anatomy, shell morphology, and life habits and the designation of thirteen morphological classes in three functional groups (Oliver 1981). Experimental studies demonstrate behavioral flexibility and life positions that vary with substrate type (Oliver and Allen 1980). Lack of evolutionary diversification is popularly attributed to morphological constraints, and groups that fail to diversify are ...