Microconchid tubeworms from the Jurassic of England and France
OLEV VINN and PAUL D. TAYLOR
Olev Vinn [olev.vinn@ut.ee], Geoloogia Instituut, University of Tartu, Vanemuise 46, 51014 Tartu, Estonia; Paul D. Taylor [p.taylor@nhm.ac.uk], Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, U.K.
The Bajocian tubeworm Spirorbis midfordensis, previously regarded as a spirorbid polychaete, is reinterpreted as a microconchid and assigned to Punctaconchus gen. nov. along with two new species, Punctaconchus ampliporus sp. nov. (Toarcian?, Aalenian–Bathonian), the type species of the new genus, and Punctaconchus palmeri sp. nov. (Bathonian). Microconchids are a mostly Palaeozoic group of tubeworms that are probably more closely related to modern lopho− phorate phyla than they are to polychaetes. Punctaconchus, the youngest unequivocal microconchid, is characterised by having large pores (punctae) penetrating the tube wall, which has a fibrous or platy lamellar microstructure, and ripplemark−like transverse ridges on the tube interior. In both morphology and ecology it is a remarkable homeomorph of the polychaete Spirorbis.
Key words : Microconchida, morphology, Jurassic, England, France.
Acta Palaeontol. Pol. 52 (2): 391–399, 2007. An Open Access Article.