Correction

New insights into Lithocodium aggregatum Elliott 1956 and Bacinella irregularis Radoicic 1959 (Late Jurassic Lower Cretaceous): two ulvophycean green algae (?Order Ulotrichales) with a heteromorphic life cycle (epilithic/euendolithic) (vol 56, pg 509, 2010)

Journal

FACIES
Volume 56, Issue 4, Pages 635-673

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10347-010-0223-3

Keywords

Genus Lithocodium; Genus Bacinella; Chlorophyceae; Ichnotaxa; Calcimicrobes; Bioerosion; Systematics; Late Jurassic; Early Cretaceous

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [Bi 1074/1-2]
  2. I + D + i research projects [CGL2005-07445-CO3-01, CGL2008-04916]
  3. Consolider-Ingenio 2010 programme [CSD 2006-0004]
  4. Grup Consolidat de Recerca Geologia Sedimentaria [2009SGR-1451]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The Late Jurassic Lower Cretaceous microorganisms incertae sedis Lithocodium aggregatum Elliott and Bacinella irregularis RadoieiO are taxonomically studied based on material from the Lower Aptian of the western Maestrat Basin (Spain). This study is supplemented with detailed photographs from Elliot's type-material. Given that the original description of Lithocodium aggregatum is ambiguous, a detail from the holotype is chosen as an epitype to serve as an interpretative type (article 9.7 ICBN). Lithocodium is re-interpreted as a filamentousseptate heterotrichale ulvophycean alga (?order Ulotrichales) exhibiting a heteromorphic life cycle consisting of two phases: an epilithic gametophytic and a euendolithic sporophytic (Gomontia stage). Bacinella irregularis is interpreted and redescribed as a purely euendolithic ulvophycean alga which bores into either Lithocodium aggregatum or the substrate below Lithocodium crusts. A small microendolith boring into Lithocodium crusts capable of cryptobiotically stretching within its filamentous network is tentatively assigned to the siphonal chlorophyte Ostreobium Bornet and Flahault. Another associated microfilamentous boring chlorophyte with characteristic long thin hairs (setae) is described as Phaeophila? sp. The euendolithic community comprises a variety of micro- and macroborings that affect the thalli of Lithocodium. Finally, the filaments of the outer zone of the Lithocodium crust are infested by calcimicrobes (cyanobacteria, ?fungi). The description made by Elliott in his original work of the inner layer of Lithocodium aggregatum as confused is explained here as a complex multitaxon chlorophyte-calcimicrobial assemblage overprinted by multiple bioerosion ichnofabrics.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available