An annotated catalogue of types of Silurian–Devonian brachiopod species from southern Belgium and northern France in the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (1870–1945), with notes on those curated in other Belgian and foreign institutions
Abstract
The type material of 45 Pridolian–Devonian brachiopod species, described in southern Belgium and northern France (1870–1945) and curated at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (Brussels), is re-investigated and illustrated in order to facilitate future taxonomic revision; such a catalogue should allow a better assessment of the brachiopod diversity during the considered time span. Furthermore, 28 other Silurian–Devonian species originally described in Belgium (1850–1950), but housed in other Belgian or foreign institutions, are also discussed. For taxonomical purposes, the lectotypes of several species are selected; the latter were described by Asselberghs (Stropheodonta couviniensis, Plethorhyncha percostata var. gdoumontensis, Athyris dorlodoti, Retzia gdoumontensis, Dielasma maillieuxi), Béclard (Orthis dorsoplicata, Orthis musischura, Rhynchonella parvula (non R. parvula Eudes-Deslongchamps)), de Ryckholt (Lingula amayana), Dewalque (Crania corneti), and Maillieux (Discina (Discina) forrierensis, Pholidostrophia extensa, Anoplia theorassensis, Schuchertella durbutensis, Streptorhynchus rahiri, Pentamerus loei). Re-investigation of the ambocoeliid Spirifer pentameroides Stainier highlighted the homonymy between Diazoma Dürkoop, 1970 (Brachiopoda) and Diazoma Lamarck, 1816 (Tunicata); the former genus must be rejected and replaced by a valid synonym, namely Kelusia Mamedov, 1978.
1. Introduction
1The Silurian (Pridoli) and Devonian marine succession of southern Belgium and northern France (Fig. 1) is particularly rich in invertebrates and notably in brachiopods (northern France means herein the area comprised between Mondrepuis (Aisne), to the west and Givet (Ardennes), to the east). This geographically restricted area is famous worldwide as several internationally recognized Devonian stages were firstly defined there such as the Givetian and the Famennian. During the interval ranging from 1870 to 1945, numerous new brachiopod species and varieties were erected on the basis of material from this area especially by E. Asselberghs (1889–1959) and E. Maillieux (1875–1946); the type material of most of them is now curated at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (Brussels). Whereas international palaeontological databases are built for assessing the evolution of the biodiversity through time, many of these brachiopod species and ‘varieties’ described in the course of the second half of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century have never been revised so far; they are still only known by embellished drawings or poor-quality photographs.
2The aim of this paper is to contribute to the assessment of the brachiopod diversity during the considered stratigraphic timespan in promoting and facilitating future taxonomic studies. For this reason, the type material of almost each species deposited at Brussels is illustrated photographically (sometimes for the first time) and discussed. For the species which remain poorly known notably due to the deficient state of preservation of the type material and/or limited material, this annotated catalogue should be considered only as a first step in their reassessment, pending the study of further material. Moreover, other species originally described in Belgium (1850–1950), but curated in Belgian universities and foreign institutions (France, Germany, USA), are also discussed.
2. Stratigraphy
3At the end of the Silurian (Pridoli) and during the Devonian, southern Belgium and northern France were located along the southeastern margin of Laurussia. Pridolian units developed on the margins of the Cambro-Ordovician Givonne and Stavelot massifs (Fig. 1) were notably discussed by Vandenven (1991), Godefroid (1995a), Godefroid & Cravatte (1999), Belanger & Ghysel (2017), and Marion et al. (in press). The lithostratigraphy of the Devonian units recognized in the Brabant Parautochton, Haine-Sambre-Meuse Overturned Thrust Sheets, and the Ardenne Allochthon (Dinant Synclinorium only) (Fig. 1) (for more details related to these Variscan units, see Belanger et al., 2012) was described by Godefroid et al. (1994) (Lower Devonian), Bultynck et al. (1991) (Middle Devonian), and Boulvain et al. (1999) (Upper Devonian, Frasnian only); an overview of the whole Devonian (except for the Variscan units located south of the Dinant Synclinorium) was provided by Bultynck & Dejonghe (2002). The reader is referred to these publications for more details, especially concerning the age of the lithostratigraphic units.
Figure 1. Location and schematic geological map of southern Belgium and northern France with indication of the localities cited in the text (modified from de Béthune, 1954). Abbreviations: Am, Amay; As, Astenet; Bo, Boussu-en-Fagne; Bu, Bure; Ch, Chimay; Co, Couvin; D, Durbuy; E, Emines; Fa, Fauvillers; Fe, Ferrières; Gd, Gdoumont; Go, Godinne; Ha, Harzé; HSM-OTS, Haine-Sambre-Meuse Overturned Thrust Sheets (Belanger et al., 2012); Hu, Huccorgne; L, Longlier; Ma, Maurenne; Mo, Mondrepuis; Mu, Muno; N, Nouzonville; Ol, Olloy; Ov, Ovifat; Re, Recogne; Ro, Rochefort; Sa, Sautour; S-H, Saint-Hubert; So, Sombreffe; Ti, Tilff; Tr, Treignes; V-M, Vireux-Molhain; Wa, Waimes (Weismes in German); Wi, Wihéries.
4
5Due to the extreme scarcity of the conodonts in the essentially clastic Lower Devonian succession of southern Belgium, the Lower Devonian stage boundaries have been approximately positioned by Steemans (1989) by means of spores, who indirectly correlated his spore zonation defined in Belgium by way of Brittany (western France) with the chitinozoan zones also recognized in the Lower Devonian succession of Bohemia (see also Godefroid et al. (1994, fig. 2) and Bultynck et al. (2000, fig. 2) for the correlation between the old boundaries and those of the Subcommission on Devonian Stratigraphy). The use of the term ‘Pragian’ and ‘Emsian’ in the recent Belgian literature is quite different from the use of the ‘Siegenian’ and ‘Emsian’ in the sense of E. Maillieux or E. Asselberghs (see Godefroid et al., 1994, figs 2, 5) and the base of the Emsian in the German sense is older than that defined by Godefroid & Stainier (1982) in southern Belgium. Furthermore, as pointed out by Carls et al. (2008), the Pragian–Emsian boundary in the current Global Stratotype Section and Point (Zinzilban Gorge section, Uzbekistan; Yolkin et al., 1997) is much older than the Siegenian–Emsian boundary in the German sense. Consequently, as thoroughly explained by Jansen (2016) essentially for the Lower Devonian of the Rhenish Massif, the regional Gedinnian, Siegenian and Emsian stages are used here (Belgian sense!) because the stages recognized internationally but defined in pelagic facies on the basis of conodonts and graptolites, cannot be applied in southern Belgium with precision. Nevertheless, the age provided by Godefroid et al. (1994) and Bultynck & Dejonghe (2002) are also indicated, despite the discrepancies reported above.
6The age of the Waimes Member (Marteau Formation), which is developed on the south-eastern margin of the Stavelot Massif, and its relationships with the Mondrepuis Formation were discussed by Godefroid & Cravatte (1999, fig. 5) (see also Bultynck et al., 2000, fig. 2) on the basis of the brachiopod associations. These authors correlated the fossiliferous beds of the Waimes Member with their upper Ruisseau des Roches brachiopod fauna defined at Muno and assigned an earliest Gedinnian age (Pridolian) to them (see also Jansen’s (2016) discussion).
3. Material and methods
7The bulk of the material is deposited at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (prefixed RBINS); the present catalogue benefited from the work of J. Godefroid, who patiently gathered the type specimens from all the Palaeozoic invertebrate collections of the RBINS during his career. Some type specimens from the palaeontological collections of the Liège University (prefixed ULg.PA.) are also illustrated.
8The Silurian and Devonian species are described herein order by order, following the classification of Williams et al. (1996), and alphabetically classified by their specific name using their original generic assignment, and thus not stratigraphically classified. The names published with a diacritic mark have been corrected according the Article 32.5.2 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (fourth edition, 1999). For each species, a synonymy list, which is focused essentially on the most important Belgian references, is provided in order to facilitate the future revision of the species if necessary. The type locality of a nominal species-group taxon is that of the name-bearing type (Article 76 of the Code); in order to protect the outcrops from unauthorized collecting and vandalism, precise locality information is voluntarily excluded from the present paper but is deposited with the studied material and available to qualified personnel. The localities cited in the text are plotted in Fig. 1. Concerning the syntypes (thus the paralectotypes if a lectotype was previously selected) curated at the RBINS, only the specimens illustrated in the original papers have been considered, but it is evident that others should be regarded as such. Nonetheless, the screening of the whole RBINS collections for the search of additional syntypes would have been a too time-consuming task for all the species discussed in this paper, and thus remains to be done.
9It clearly appears that many species were erected on the basis of insufficiently preserved material or are only known by a very restricted material (sometimes only one specimen is available!). Had these species not been given a name, the present writer would have left them in open nomenclature.
10The smallest specimens were photographed using a low-vacuum scanning electron microscope (ESEM FEI Quanta 200), but not coated with gold. The larger specimens were coated with ammonium chloride sublimate before being photographed.
11In the legends of the figures, the original (old) names are followed by current names given in square brackets.
4. Brachiopods curated at the RBINS
4.1. Order Lingulida
12Discina (Discina) forrierensis Maillieux, 1910a
13(Fig. 2A-Q)
141910a Discina (Discina) forrierensis Maillieux: 345, 348-349.
151922a Orbiculoidea forrierensis; Maillieux: 13.
161932 Roemerella forrierensis (Maillieux); Maillieux: 11, 22, pl. 1, figs 3-13.
171933 Roemerella forrierensis; Maillieux: 59.
181941a Roemerella forrierensis (Maillieux); Maillieux: 10, 14.
191941b Roemerella forrierensis (Maillieux); Maillieux: 2.
201946 Roemerella forrierensis (Maillieux); Asselberghs: 247, 330.
21Type material. No type specimen was selected by Maillieux (1910a), who failed to provide illustrations of his new species. Two holotypes (RBINS a946, a951), one for dorsal valve and one for ventral valve, were designated as such by Maillieux (1932) among the syntypes in contrast with the Article 73.1 of the Code. The dorsal valve RBINS a946 (Maillieux, 1932, pl. 1, fig. 3, 3a, 4) is hereby designated as the lectotype (Fig. 2A-D); the paralectotypes RBINS a947-a955 (Maillieux, 1932, pl. 1, figs 5-13) are re-illustrated here (Fig. 2E-Q).
22Type locality and horizon. Rochefort 8650 (see Maillieux, 1910a, 1932), top of the Chooz Formation (Emsian).
23Description. See Maillieux (1910a, 1932).
24Remarks. The strongly convexoconcave profile of this species led Maillieux (1932) to assign it to Roemerella Hall & Clarke, 1890 rather than to Orbiculoidea d’Orbigny, 1847 that includes strongly dorsibiconvex shells. Although Mergl (2006) considered the first genus as poorly known and possibly synonym of the latter, Maillieux’s (1932, 1941a, 1941b) generic identification is maintained here, pending further investigation. Note that Maillieux (1910a, 1932) discussed the differences between R. forrierensis and the large-sized Gigadiscina anomala (Kayser, 1892) (see Mergl & Massa, 2005, fig. 1F) from the Siegenian of the Siegen area (Germany).
25Current name. Roemerella forrierensis (Maillieux, 1910a).
Figure 2. A-Q. Discina (Discina) forrierensis Maillieux, 1910a [Roemerella forrierensis (Maillieux, 1910a)]; Rochefort 8650, Chooz Formation. A-D. RBINS a946 (lectotype), dorsal valve in plan, lateral, posterior and anterior views. E-F. RBINS a948 (paralectotype), dorsal valve in plan, lateral, posterior and anterior views. I-K. RBINS a947 (paralectotype), dorsal valve in plan, lateral and anterior views. L. RBINS 949 (paralectotype), dorsal valve in plan view. M. RBINS a950 (paralectotype), dorsal valve in plan view. N. RBINS a951 (paralectotype), ventral valve in plan view. O. RBINS a953 (paralectotype), ventral external mould. P. RBINS a954 (paralectotype), incomplete ventral interior. Q. RBINS a955 (paralectotype), incomplete ventral external mould of ventral valve with shelly remains. BBB. R-S. Stropheodonta (Leptostrophia) calcarifera Maillieux, 1938 [‘Leptostrophia’ calcarifera (Maillieux, 1938)], RBINS a1116 (holotype), internal mould of ventral valve in plan view and close-up of muscle field; Rochefort 31 (2), Eau Noire Formation. Scale bars: 10 mm (A-R), 5 mm (S).
4.2. Order Strophomenida
26Stropheodonta (Leptostrophia) calcarifera Maillieux, 1938
27(Fig. 2R-S)
281938 Stropheodonta (Leptostrophia) calcarifera Maillieux: 11 (cited as S. (L.) calcar [sic]), 35, pl. 1, fig. 3.
291941b Leptostrophia calcarifera Maillieux; Maillieux: 5.
30?1955 Leptostrophia calcarifera (Maillieux); Asselberghs: 187, 189.
311973 Stropheodonta (Leptostrophia) calcarifera Maillieux, 1938; García-Alcalde: 48.
321978a Stropheodonta (Leptostrophia) calcarifera Maillieux, 1938; Harper & Boucot: 73.
33Type material. The mould of a ventral valve (RBINS a1116; Fig. 2R-S) was selected as the holotype by Maillieux (1938, pl. 1, fig. 3).
34Type locality and horizon. Rochefort 31, Eau Noire Formation (most of this lithostratigraphic unit is late Emsian in age, the top is Eifelian).
35Description. See Maillieux (1938).
36Remarks. Until now, this species is only represented by the holotype, although Asselberghs (1955) reported its presence in the Eifelian Jemelle Formation on the southeast border of the Dinant Synclinorium, but without illustration. According to García-Alcalde (1973), it is close to representatives of Gampholosia Stainbrook, 1945 by its resupinate profile, the structure of its ventral muscle field and its parvicostellate ornamentation (it needs to be confirmed by the study of further material!), but the development of nervation is not revealed. Harper & Boucot (1978a) suggested that Maillieux’s species could belong to a new leptostrophiid genus. According to U. Jansen (pers. com., March 2019), Maillieux’s species has typical leptostrophiid muscle field and process cavities; ‘Leptostrophia’ palma (Kayser, 1871) (hardly developed socket ridges) or Leptostrophiella sera (Fuchs, 1919) (with distinct socket ridges) seem to be more closely related although these do not show a resupinate profile. For the reasons cited above, the generic assignment of the species calcarifera still remains uncertain.
37Current name. ‘Leptostrophia’ calcarifera (Maillieux, 1938).
38Stropheodonta couviniensis Asselberghs, 1930
39(Fig. 3A-L)
401922 Stropheodonta triculta Fuchs; Asselberghs: B133.
411923 Stropheodonta triculta Fuchs; Asselberghs: 19-20, 63, table 1, pl. 1, figs 1a-b, 2-3.
421930 Stropheodonta couviniensis Asselberghs: 29.
431933 Stropheodonta couviniensis; Maillieux: 67, pl. 4, fig. 82.
441938 Stropheodonta couviniensis Asselberghs; Maillieux: 11.
451941b Stropheodonta couviniensis Asselberghs; Maillieux: 5.
461977 Bojodouvillina couviniensis (E. Asselberghs, 1930); Bultynck & Boonen: 491-492.
471978b Stropheodonta couviniensis Asselberghs, 1930; Harper & Boucot: 45.
481981 Stropheodonta couviniensis Asselberghs; Jahnke: 157.
49Type material. The ventral internal mould (RBINS a3146; Fig. 3A-E) illustrated by Asselberghs (1923, pl. 1, fig. 1a-b) is hereby designated as the lectotype whereas the two other ventral internal moulds (RBINS a3147-a3148; Fig. 3F-H, I-L) illustrated by Asselberghs (1923, pl. 1, figs 2-3) are paralectotypes.
50Type locality and horizon. Bioul (Godinne), flanks of the Godinne anticlinal, Rivière Formation, Rouillon Member (Eifelian).
51Description. See Asselberghs (1923).
52Remarks. Stropheodonta couviniensis was considered as a synonym of Strophomena taeniolata Sandberger & Sandberger, 1856 by Jahnke (1981); the latter was selected by Jansen (2014) as the type species of his new genus Gibbodouvillina. However, the available ventral valves are clearly less convex than those of G. taeniolata as figured by Jansen (2014, figs 5A, E-F) or than those of G. interstrialis (Philips, 1841) (e.g. Biernat, 1966; Halamski, 2009). In point of fact, the morphology of the species couviniensis, both externally and internally, suggests an assignment to the flat-shelled genus Mesodouvillina Williams, 1950, but the examination of dorsal valves is required to confirm the generic identification and the complete reassessment of Asselberghs’ species.
53Current name. Mesodouvillina? couviniensis (Asselberghs, 1930).
Figure 3. A-L. Stropheodonta couviniensis Asselberghs, 1930 [Mesodouvillina? couviniensis (Asselberghs, 1930)]; Godinne (flanks of the Godinne anticline), Rivière Formation. A-E. RBINS a3146 (lectotype), internal mould of a ventral valve in plan view, close-up of denticulate hinge line, cast of muscle field, oblique anterolateral view of cast of muscle field, detail of external mould. F-H. RBINS a3147 (paralectotype), internal mould of a ventral valve in plan view, cast of muscle field, oblique anterolateral view of cast of muscle field. I-L. RBINS a3148 (paralectotype), exfoliated ventral valve in ventral, lateral, posterior and anterior views. M-BB. Pholidostrophia extensa Maillieux, 1938; Olloy 7970, Jemelle Formation. M-Q. RBINS a1117 (paralectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. R-V. RBINS a1118 (paralectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. W-BB. RBINS a1119 (lectotype), articulated specimen (removed from the matrix) in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior, anterior and posteroventral views (see also Fig. 4A-C). Scale bars: 10 mm (A, C-D, F, I-L, M-BB), 5 mm (B, E, G-H).
54Pholidostrophia extensa Maillieux, 1938
55(Figs 3M-BB, 4A-C)
561938 Pholidostrophia extensa Maillieux: 21, 36, pl. 1, figs 4-6.
571941b Pholidostrophia extensa Maillieux; Maillieux: 6.
581967 P. [Pholidostrophia] extensa Maillieux; Harper et al.: 417.
59Type material. Maillieux (1938) illustrated three specimens that he considered as the types of his new species. Nevertheless, he did not select a holotype among them. The articulated specimen RBINS a1119 (Maillieux, 1938, pl. 1, fig. 6), the better preserved one in terms of ornamentation, is hereby designated as the lectotype (Figs 3W-BB, 4A-C); the two other specimens RBINS a1117-a1118 (Maillieux, 1938, pl. 1, figs 4, 5) are thus paralectotypes (Fig. 3M-Q, R-V).
60Type locality and horizon. Olloy 7970, Jemelle Formation (Eifelian).
61Description. See Maillieux (1938).
62Remarks. Harper et al. (1967) questionably assigned this species to Mesopholidostrophia Williams, 1950, which was considered by these authors as a subgenus of Pholidostrophia Hall & Clarke, 1892. Nevertheless, none of the types displays the internal morphology that is crucial for generic identification. On the basis of the external morphology, it is not at all excluded that Maillieux’s species is a synonym of Pholidostrophia (Mesopholidostrophia) semicircularis (Kayser, 1871) from the Eifelian of the Eifel as re-illustrated by Harper et al. (1967, text-figs 4-8).
63Current name. Pholidostrophia extensa Maillieux, 1938.
Figure 4. A-C. Pholidostrophia extensa Maillieux, 1938, RBINS a1119 (lectotype), articulated specimen in ventral and anterior (ventral valve on top; enclosed in matrix as illustrated by Maillieux (1938)) views and close-up of the interareas (see also Fig. 3W-BB); Olloy 7970, Jemelle Formation. D-I. Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux, 1941a; Couvin 8711, Hierges Formation; all SEM. D-F. RBINS a7779 (lectotype), internal mould of ventral valve in plan and oblique posterolateral views, and detail of umbonal region. G-I. RBINS a7780 (paralectotype), interior of dorsal valve (with shelly remains) in plan and oblique lateral views, and detail of the cardinalia. J-O. Productus (Thomasina) demaneti Maillieux, 1938 [‘Productina’ demaneti (Maillieux, 1938)], RBINS a1120 (holotype), articulated specimen with dorsal valve covered by carbonate matrix in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views (ventral valve on top for M and N), and detail of ornamentation and flank spine (arrow); Rochefort 7273, Jemelle Formation. Scale bars: 10 mm (A-B, J-N), 1 mm (C-E, G-H), 0.5 mm (F, I), 5 mm (O).
4.3. Order Productida
4.3.1. Suborder Chonetidina
64Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux, 1941a
65(Fig. 4D-I)
661941a Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux: 34-36, figs 2, 3, 4.
671941b Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux; Maillieux: 8.
681941c Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux; Maillieux: 7.
691946 Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux; Asselberghs: 268, 331.
701962 Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux, 1941; Muir-Wood: 53, 54, fig. 10c (copy of Maillieux, 1941a, fig. 2).
711968 Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux, 1941; Boucot & Harper: 168.
721981 Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux; Rachebœuf: 269, 273.
731988 Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux, 1941; Godefroid & Stainier: 111, 139.
741994 Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux, 1941; Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 16, fig. 10.
751995 Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux, 1941; Rachebœuf: 225.
762016 Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux, 1941; Jansen: 86.
77Type material. The ventral internal mould RBINS a7779 (Maillieux, 1941a, figs 2, 4?) is designated hereby as the lectotype (Fig. 4D-F) whereas the dorsal internal mould RBINS a7780 (Maillieux, 1941a, fig. 3) (Fig. 4G-I) is a paralectotype. Both specimens are located on the same slab including six additional internal moulds of ventral valves that are not illustrated here, but they have to be considered as additional paralectotypes according to the Article 74.1.3 of the Code.
78Type locality and horizon. Couvin 8711, Hierges Formation (late Emsian).
79Description. See Maillieux (1941a).
80Remarks. This minute chonetidine ranks among the most abundant brachiopods of the Hierges Formation in Belgium and northern France. It is also reported in the Wiltz Formation (Eifel Synclines, Germany) by Jansen (2016), but its presence in the Lower Devonian of Portugal (Perdigão, 1973) needs to be confirmed (see Rachebœuf, 1981).
81Current name. Anoplia theorassensis Maillieux, 1941a.
4.3.2. Suborder Productidina
82Productus (Thomasina) demaneti Maillieux, 1938
83(Fig. 4J-O)
841938 Productus (Thomasina) demaneti Maillieux: 21, 37, pl. 1, fig. 9, 9a-c.
851941b Thomasina demaneti Maillieux; Maillieux: 7.
861980 Eopr. [Eoproductella] demaneti (Maillieux, 1938); Rzhonsnitskaya: 60, 61.
871983 Eoproductella demaneti; Rzhonsnitskaya: 9, table 1.
881990 Productus (Thomasina) demaneti Maillieux, 1938; Lazarev: 49.
89Type material. The holotype (RBINS a1120; Fig. 4J-O), selected by Maillieux (1938, pl. 1, fig. 9, 9a-c), corresponds to an articulated specimen of which the dorsal valve is covered by carbonate matrix.
90Type locality and horizon. Rochefort 7273, Jemelle Formation (Eifelian).
91Description. See Maillieux (1938).
92Remarks. The holotype – the only specimen available – is characterized by flattened ribs increasing by bifurcation and numerous growth lines; only one flank spine base was observed close to the hinge line on the right side of the ventral valve (Fig. 4L-M). Rzhonsnitskaya (1980) included Maillieux’s (1938) species, which ranks among the oldest Productidina from southern Belgium, within her new genus Eoproductella, but this generic assignment was rightly challenged by Lazarev (1990) on the basis of its coarser radial ornamentation. Moreover, the disposition of the spines in the type species of Eoproductella is markedly distinct (compare with Rzhonsnitskaya, 1980, pl. 18, figs 1a-b, 3-4). The lack of knowledge about the internal morphology precludes a satisfactory generic assignment even if the external morphology is very close to the productellid genera Productina Sutton, 1938 and Argentiproductus Cooper & Muir-Wood, 1951 as revised by Brunton & Mundy (1993), which are both clearly younger stratigraphically. Further material is thus needed to reach a better generic identification, but the species demaneti is temporarily referred to Sutton’s genus due to its external features.
93Current name. ‘Productina’ demaneti (Maillieux, 1938).
4.4. Order Orthotetida
94Schuchertellopsis durbutensis Maillieux, 1939
951939 Schuchertellopsis durbutensis Maillieux: 6-8, figs 1-6.
961941b Schuchertellopsis durbutensis Maillieux; Maillieux: 6.
971965 Schuchertellopsis durbutensis; Williams: H408.
981974a Schuchertellopsis durbutensis Maillieux, E., 1939; Sartenaer: 6, 10.
992000 Schuchertellopsis (Schuchertellopsis) durbutensis; Williams & Brunton: 667, fig. 480.5a-c.
1002005 Schuchertellopsis (Schuchertellopsis) durbutensis Maillieux, 1939; Long & Brunton: cited many times, figs 1a-b, 2, 4, 5-15.
1012005a Schuchertellopsis (Schuchertellopsis) durbutensis Maillieux, 1939; Mottequin: 2, 294, 312, 317, pl. 35, fig. 3.
1022007 Schuchertellopsis (Schuchertellopsis) durbutensis; Brunton: 2674, 2677, fig. 1782a-b.
1032008a Schuchertellopsis (Schuchertellopsis) durbutensis Maillieux, 1939; Mottequin: 1060, 1069, figs 10.1, 23.
104Type material. Maillieux (1939) did not select a holotype for his new species and no lectotype was designated by Long & Brunton (2005), who just mentioned the expression types 1 (RBINS a1140), 2 (RBINS a1142A), and 3 (RBINS a1139). I choose the ventral valve RBINS a1140 (Maillieux, 1939, fig. 2; Long & Brunton, 2005, fig. 1a-b) as lectotype. The specimens RBINS a1139, 1141A-B, 1142A-B, which were illustrated by Maillieux (1939, figs 1, 3-6) (see also Long & Brunton, 2005, figs 2, 4), are paralectotypes.
105Type locality and horizon. Durbuy 5337, Barvaux Formation (late Frasnian).
106Description. See Maillieux (1939) and Long & Brunton (2005).
107Remarks. This particular schuchertellid is one of the numerous epizoans (e.g. tabulate corals, bryozoans, brachiopods) of the cyrtospiriferids occurring in the Barvaux Formation, but it is markedly less abundant than the representatives of the craniide genus Petrocrania Raymond, 1911 (Mottequin, 2005a). The shell was fixed by complete cementation of the ventral valve on its host, but without simulating the morphology of the latter as is the case of Petrocrania, and located close to the anterior margin of the host, either on dorsal or ventral valve (Long & Brunton, 2005).
108Current name. Schuchertellopsis (Schuchertellopsis) durbutensis Maillieux, 1939.
109Streptorhynchus rahiri Maillieux, 1909a
110(Fig. 5A-Q)
1111909a Streptorhynchus Rahiri Maillieux: 119, 142, 148-149, fig. 2a-c.
1121912 Orthothetes [sic] Rahiri; Asselberghs: 7.
1131912 Orthothetes [sic] Rahiri; Maillieux: 47.
1141927 Schuchertella Rahiri Maillieux; Maillieux in Asselberghs & Maillieux: 160.
1151933 Schellwienella Rahiri; Maillieux: 81.
116? 1936 Schellwienella Rahiri (Maillieux); Asselberghs: 257, 313, 316.
1171939 ‘Streptorhynchus’ Rahiri Maillieux; Maillieux: 8.
1181940a Schuchertellopsis Rahiri (Maillieux); Maillieux: 7.
1191941b Schuchertellopsis rahiri (Maillieux); Maillieux: 6.
1201988 Streptorhynchus rahiri; Brice: 341.
121Type material. The articulated specimen RBINS a1670 (Maillieux, 1909a, fig. 2a) is hereby designated as the lectotype (Fig. 5A-E); the paralectotypes are the specimens RBINS a1671-1672 (Maillieux, 1909a, fig. 2b, c) (Fig. 5F-L, M-Q) and a fourth poorly preserved one (RBINS a1673), which was not illustrated by Maillieux (1909a).
122Type locality and horizon. Couvin 8705, Nismes Formation (early Frasnian). Except its Givetian lowermost part, the Nismes Formation is early Frasnian in age (e.g. Bultynck & Dejonghe, 2002).
123Description. See Maillieux (1909a).
124Remarks. The investigation of the available material did not reveal the development of extropunctae. From the generic viewpoint, this species, which was considered as scarce by Maillieux (1909a), is doubtfully referred to the areostrophiid genus Floweria Cooper & Dutro, 1982 rather than to the related genus Eoschuchertella Gratsianova, 1974 on the basis of its aequibiconvex shell with ribs increasing by intercalation. At the ventral valve, the muscle field is poorly impressed (Fig. 5F) whereas the pseudodeltidium is strongly convex, complemented at the dorsal valve, by a large, medianly grooved chilidium (Fig. 5K-L). According to Brice (1988), Maillieux’s species is very close to Eoschuchertella bouchardi (Rigaux, 1873) and would only differ from the latter by the absence of a shallow median depression on the dorsal valve. Nonetheless, the revision of both species is needed.
125Current name. Floweria? rahiri (Maillieux, 1909a).
Figure 5. A-Q. Streptorhynchus rahiri Maillieux, 1909a [Floweria? rahiri (Maillieux, 1909a)]; Couvin 8705, Nismes Formation. A-E. RBINS a1670 (lectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. F-L. RBINS a1671 (paralectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views, and close-up (SEM) of central part of ventral interarea (pseudodeltidium, chilidium). M-Q. RBINS a1672 (paralectotype), articulated juvenile specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. R-V. Fascicostella belgica Maillieux, 1941a [Resserella belgica (Maillieux, 1941a)], RBINS a7778 (holotype), internal mould of dorsal valve in plan and anterior views, putty cast in plan, oblique anterolateral views, and lateral view of the cardinalia; Couvin 8711, Hierges Formation. W-BB. Orthis dorsoplicata Béclard, 1891 [Parmorthina? dorsoplicata (Béclard, 1891)], RBINS a1696, articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views, and detail of the ornamentation on the right side of the ventral umbo; Grupont (Bure), Eau Noire Formation. Scale bars: 10 mm (A-J, M-Q, R-AA, BB), 2.5 mm (K-L).
4.5. Orthida
126Fascicostella belgica Maillieux, 1941a
127(Fig. 5R-V)
1281941a Fascicostella belgica Maillieux: 10, 17-18, fig. 1, 1a.
1291941b Fascicostella belgica Maillieux; Maillieux: 3.
1301946 Fascicostella belgica Maillieux; Asselberghs: 267, 330.
1311971 Fascicostella belgica Maillieux, 1941; Walmsley & Boucot: 522-523.
1321994 Fascicostella belgica Maillieux, 1941; Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 16, fig. 10.
133Type material. According to Maillieux (1941a), only an incomplete dorsal internal mould (RBINS a7778; Fig. 5R-V) was available for study; it is thus the holotype by monotypy.
134Type locality and horizon. Couvin 8711, Hierges Formation (late Emsian).
135Description. See Maillieux (1941a).
136Remarks. According to Walmsley & Boucot (1971), Maillieux’s species needs further study before assignment to Fascicostella Schuchert & Cooper, 1931 due to its poor original illustration. On the basis of the holotype, it is obvious that this species cannot be referred to that genus as there is no sign of fasciculation at all. Such a type of ornamentation should have left traces on the internal mould. The internal morphology of the holotype is consistent with the concept of the genus Resserella Bancroft, 1928 (U. Jansen, pers. com., March 2019) and strongly resembles that of the Emsian species Resserella triangularis (Zeiler, 1857) from Germany illustrated by Maurer (1889, pl. 3, figs 8-12) and Walmsley & Boucot (1971, pl. 101, figs 1-2). More specimens are required to reach a better species characterization and to discuss its relationships with R. triangularis.
137Current name. Resserella belgica (Maillieux, 1941a).
138Orthis dorsoplicata Béclard, 1891
139(Fig. 5W-BB)
1401891 Orthis dorsoplicata Béclard: 99-100, pl. 3, figs 6-8.
1411922a Rhipidomella dorsoplicata; Maillieux: 14.
1421932 Orthis [Fascicostella] dorsoplicata Béclard; Schuchert & Cooper: 130.
1431933 Fascicostella dorsoplicata; Maillieux: 66
1441938 Fascicostella dorsoplicata (Béclard); Maillieux: 11.
1451941a Fascicostella dorsoplicata (Béclard); Maillieux: 17.
1461941b Fascicostella dorsoplicata (Béclard); Maillieux: 3.
1471971 Orthis dorsoplicata Béclard; Walmsley & Boucot: 522-523.
1481975 Orthis dorsoplicata Béclard, 1891; Drot: 12.
1492015 Orthis dorsoplicata Béclard, 1891; García-Alcalde: 66.
150Type material. Of the three specimens illustrated by Béclard (1891), only the largest (RBINS a1696) was traced (Béclard, 1891, pl. 3, fig. 8, 8a-d) and is the lectotype (Fig. 5W-BB) by present designation.
151Type locality and horizon. Grupont (Bure), Eau Noire Formation (late Emsian–Eifelian).
152Description. See Béclard (1891).
153Remarks. The species seems to be rare according to the few poorly preserved specimens present in the RBINS collections. Béclard (1891) cited his new species in Lesterny and Bure where it was associated to Rhynchonella parvula Béclard, 1891 (non R. parvula Eudes-Deslongchamps, 1862) and Terebratula loxogonia Béclard, 1891 (see below for remarks related to these two species). Schuchert & Cooper (1932) assigned Orthis dorsoplicata to the genus Fascicostella Schuchert & Cooper, 1931, an opinion followed by Maillieux (1938, 1941a, 1941b), but this assignment was rightly questioned by Walmsley & Boucot (1971) because its ornamentation is not as coarsely fascicostellate as in Fascicostella. The main external features of the lectotype are the following: shell strongly planoconvex, median ventral flattening, ventral interarea concave and apsacline, dorsal sulcus with raised median area, dorsal interarea as half as long as ventral one, plane catacline, and ornamentation finely fascicostellate. The lack of data related to the internal morphology precludes a definite generic assignment, but the type of ornamentation consisting of angular costellae arranged in poor bundles with strongly accentuated primary costellae may suggest an assignment to the dalmanellid Parmorthina Havlíček, 1975.
154Current name. Parmorthina? dorsoplicata (Béclard, 1891).
155Orthis musischura Béclard, 1891
156(Figs 6A-X, 7A-C)
1571891 Orthis musischura Béclard: 101-102, pl. 4, figs 1-6.
1581904 Orthis musischura Béclard, 1892 [sic]; Drevermann: 264.
1591910b Orthis musischura Béclard; Maillieux: 194.
1601911 Orthis musischura Béclard; Maillieux: 178.
1611912a Orthis musischura Béclard; Leriche: 26, 27.
1621931 Orthis musischura Béclard; Maillieux: 11.
163Type material. The articulated internal mould (RBINS a1699; Fig. 6A-F) illustrated by Béclard (1891, pl. 4, figs 3, 5) is hereby designated as the lectotype. The paralectotypes correspond to the dorsal internal mould RBINS a1701 (Béclard, 1891, pl. 4, fig. 6) (Fig. 6G-J), the ventral internal moulds RBINS a1698 (Béclard, 1891, pl. 4, fig. 2) (Fig. 6K-M) and RBINS a1700 (Béclard, 1891, pl. 4, fig. 4) (Fig. 6N-P), and the dorsal valve RBINS a1702 (Béclard, 1891, pl. 4, fig. 1f) (Fig. 6Q-X). The articulated internal mould RBINS a1697 (Béclard, 1891, pl. 4, fig. 1, 1a-e) has not been traced; only the artificial cast of the dorsal valve was recovered (Fig. 7A-C).
164Type locality and horizon. Saint-Hubert 3 (23), Villé Formation (Siegenian; Pragian).
165Description. See Béclard (1891).
166Remarks. Drevermann (1904) and Maillieux (1910b, 1911, 1931) regarded Béclard’s species as a synonym of Proschizophoria personata (Zeiler, 1857), the type species of the proschizophoriid genus Proschizophoria Maillieux, 1911 (see Boucot et al., 1966; Carls, 1974), which is common in the Siegenian of southern Belgium (Godefroid in Godefroid et al., 1994, fig. 10). Carls (1974) discussed some of the proschizophoriids recognized in Belgium and transferred the specimens previously identified as Proschizophoria torifera (Fuchs, 1919) by Asselberghs (1930) and Boucot (1960) to Fulcriphoria cf. havliceki Carls, 1974 whereas the dorsal valve illustrated by Maillieux (1931, pl. 1, fig. 1) as P. personata, which was rejected by Boucot et al. (1966) from Maillieux’s genus, was doubtfully referred to Fulcriphoria sp. T as well as the material illustrated by Renouf (1972, text-figs 6A, 7A). Re-examination of the Devonian representatives of this family in Belgium and northern France is badly needed.
167Current name. Proschizophoria personata (Zeiler, 1857).
Figure 6. Orthis musischura Béclard, 1891 [Proschizophoria personata (Zeiler, 1857)]; Saint-Hubert 3 (23), Villé Formation (A-M, Q-X); Nouzonville, Villé Formation (N-P). A-F. RBINS a1699 (lectotype), internal mould of an articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, posterodorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. G-J. RBINS a1701 (paralectotype), internal mould of a dorsal valve in posterodorsal, plan, lateral and posterior views. K-M. RBINS a1698 (paralectotype), internal mould of ventral valve in plan, posteroventral and oblique lateral views. N-P. RBINS a1700 (paralectotype), internal mould of ventral valve in plan, lateral and posterior views. Q-X. RBINS a1702 (paralectotype), deformed dorsal valve in external, posterior, anterior, lateral and internal views, and close-up of cardinalia (V-X). Scale bars are all 10 mm.
4.6. Order Pentamerida
168Pentamerus broecki Maillieux, 1909b
169(Fig. 7D-H)
1701909b Pentamerus Broecki Maillieux: 232, fig. 4a-c.
1711974 Neometabolipa broecki (Maillieux, E., 1909); Godefroid: 35-41, table 5, text-figs 11, 16, pl. 7, figs 3-5 (see this author for a more complete synonymy).
1721999 Neometabolipa broecki; Godefroid & Sartenaer in Boulvain et al.: 19, fig. BIO4.
173Type material. The articulated specimen RBINS a223 (Maillieux, 1909b, fig. 4a-c) was selected as the lectotype by Godefroid (1974, pl. 7, fig. 5a-e); it is re-illustrated in Fig. 7D-H.
174Type horizon and age. Couvin 8174 (45), Grands Breux Formation, Lion Member (middle Frasnian).
175Description. See Maillieux (1909b) and Godefroid (1974).
176Remarks. Maillieux’s species was assigned by Godefroid (1974) to his new genus Neometabolipa (see remarks concerning Pentamerus greindli).
177Current name. Neometabolipa broecki (Maillieux, 1909b).
Figure 7. A-C. Orthis musischura Béclard, 1891 [Proschizophoria personata (Zeiler, 1857)], RBINS a1697, putty cast of dorsal interior in plan, oblique lateral and inclined plan (muscle field and cardinalia) views; Saint-Hubert 3 (23), Villé Formation. D-H. Pentamerus broecki Maillieux, 1909b [Neometabolipa broecki (Maillieux, 1909b)], RBINS a223 (lectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views; Couvin 8174 (45), Grands Breux Formation (Lion Member). I-N. Pentamerus greindli Maillieux, 1909b [Metabolipa greindli (Maillieux, 1909b)], RBINS a222 (lectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, posterodorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views; Couvin 6149 (38), Moulin Liénaux Formation (Arche Member). O-U. Pentamerus loei Maillieux, 1908a [Ivdelinia (Ivdelinia) loei (Maillieux, 1908a)], RBINS a9574 (lectotype), incomplete and slightly deformed articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior, anterior and inclined ventral (arrow: median septum) views, and close-up of ribs and growth lines on the fold near the anterior margin; Couvin 80, Jemelle Formation. Scale bars: 10 mm (A-C, O-S, T), 5 mm (D-H, I-N, U).
178Pentamerus greindli Maillieux, 1909b
179(Fig. 7I-N)
1801909b Pentamerus Greindli Maillieux: 230, fig. 3a-c.
1811974 Metabolipa greindli (Maillieux, E., 1909); Godefroid: 7-23, tables 1-2, text-figs 3-7, 16, pl. 1, figs 1-7, pl. 2, figs 1-6, pl. 3, figs 1-6, pl. 4, figs 1-5, pl. 5, figs 1, 2 (see this author for a more complete synonymy).
1821983 Metabolipa greindli; Godefroid in Robaszynski & Dupuis: pl. 1, fig. 6.
1831999 Metabolipa greindli; Godefroid & Sartenaer in Boulvain et al.: 19, fig. BIO4.
184Type material. The articulated specimen RBINS a222 (Maillieux, 1909b, text-fig. 3a-c) was selected as the lectotype by Godefroid (1974, pl. 3, fig. 1a-e) and is re-illustrated here in Fig. 7I-N. The paralectotypes include the specimens RBINS a224-226 (Godefroid, 1974).
185Type locality and horizon. Couvin 6149 (38), Moulin Liénaux Formation, Arche Member (middle Frasnian).
186Description. See Maillieux (1909b) and Godefroid (1974).
187Remarks. This species was selected by Godefroid (1974) as the type species of his new genus Metabolipa and fully re-described. Note that Blodgett et al. (2002) considered Metabolipa and Neometabolipa as synonyms of Gypidula Hall, 1867 but the distinctive characters stated by Godefroid (1974) and specified later (Godefroid, 1979) appear to Mottequin (2008b) sufficient to distinguish Hall’s genus from Metabolipa and Neometabolipa.
188Current name. Metabolipa greindli (Maillieux, 1909b).
189Pentamerus loei Maillieux, 1908a
190(Fig. 7O-U)
1911908a Pentamerus Loëi Maillieux: 339-340, figs a-b.
1921912 Pentamerus Loëi: Maillieux: 52.
1931922a G. [Gypidula] Loei; Maillieux: 15.
1941938 Gypidula Loei (Maillieux); Maillieux: 21.
1951941b Gypidula loei (Maillieux); Maillieux: 4.
196? 1970 Gypidula loeï [sic] Maillieux; Bultynck: 42, 44.
197? 1970 Gypidula loei Maillieux; Bultynck: pl. 36.
1981971 Pentamerus loëi Maillieux, 1909 [sic]; Godefroid: 47.
1991995b [Ivdelinia] loei (Maillieux, 1909) [sic]; Godefroid: 83.
200Type material. Among the RBINS collections, only one poorly preserved specimen (RBINS a9574; Fig. 7O-U) identified as such was recovered so far and considered as the type (= lectotype) by Godefroid (1971); Godefroid (1995b) reported that this species is known by a single specimen. The latter is accompanied by several labels bearing Maillieux’s handwriting but it is not absolutely certain that this specimen corresponds to that illustrated by Maillieux (1908a, figs a-b). Maillieux’s line drawings show a complete but slightly distorted specimen in contrast with the specimen RBINS a9574 that is also distorted, but of which the measurements do not match those indicated by Maillieux (1908a). However, it is not excluded that this author strongly embellished the drawings. This specimen is the only one that can be considered as the model for Maillieux’s description. If it would turn out that it is really the only one, it would be considered as the holotype by monotypy. A certainty about this is, however, highly improbable.
201Type locality and horizon. Couvin 80, Jemelle Formation (limestone lens) (Eifelian).
202Description. See Maillieux (1908a).
203Remarks. Maillieux’s publication is part of the minutes of the session of the Société belge de Géologie, de Paléontologie et d’Hydrologie that took place on 18 November 1908; they were published in 1908. According to Godefroid (1995b), the type of ornamentation of Pentamerus loei, which consists of wide, medianly grooved costae (Fig. 7U) separated from each other by narrower and subangulose intercostal grooves, is characteristic of the genus Ivdelinia Andronov, 1961. The presence of a ventral median septum (Fig. 7O, T) suggests an assignment to the nominal subgenus Ivdelinia (I.). The pentamerides from the disused unit ‘Co2d’ (= Hanonet Formation) identified by Godefroid (1971) as Ivdelinia cf. loei (Maillieux) were referred to Gypidula abunda abunda Struve, 1992 by Godefroid (1995b), but those from the ‘Co2c’ (= Jemelle Formation) need to be re-investigated. Bultynck (1970) cited the species in the Couvin area, notably in its locus typicus (see also Bultynck, 1965), but due to the lack of illustration, it is impossible to confirm that it is really the one erected by Maillieux (1908a).
204Current name. Ivdelinia (Ivdelinia) loei (Maillieux, 1908a).
4.7. Order Rhynchonellida
205Rhynchonella? gosseleti Oehlert, 1893
2061893 Rhynchonella? Gosseleti Oehlert: 125-131, text-figs 1-4, pl. 3, figs 5, 6, 7a-d.
207Type material, locality and horizon. See Sartenaer & Plodowski (1975).
208Remarks. As rightly exposed by Sartenaer & Plodowski (1975) in their comprehensive discussion, this species has to be considered as a junior synonym of Araratella moresnetensis (de Koninck, 1887) (see below).
209Current name. Araratella moresnetensis (de Koninck, 1887).
210Camarotoechia? ingens Maillieux, 1936a
211(Fig. 8A-B)
2121936a Camarotoechia? ingens Maillieux: 22, 26, 32, 88-89, pl. 1, fig. 6.
2131940b Camarotoechia ingens Maillieux; Maillieux: 19.
2141941b Camarotoechia ingens Maillieux; Maillieux: 8.
2151941c Camarotoechia? ingens Maillieux; Maillieux: 3.
2161946 Camarotoechia ingens (Maillieux) [sic]; Asselberghs: 150, 329.
217Type material. The incomplete and deformed ventral valve RBINS a1068 was selected as the holotype by Maillieux (1936a, pl. 1, fig. 6) and is re-illustrated in Figure 8A-B.
218Type locality and horizon. Fauvillers 6, Villé Formation (Siegenian; Pragian).
219Description. See Maillieux (1936a).
220Remarks. This large species was erected on the basis of a single ventral valve; additional material is required for its revision and to reach a better generic assignment.
221Current name. ‘Camarotoechia’ ingens Maillieux, 1936a.
Figure 8. A-B. Camarotoechia? ingens Maillieux, 1936a [‘Camarotoechia’ ingens Maillieux, 1936a], RBINS a1068 (holotype), crushed incomplete ventral valve in plan and anteroventral views; Fauvillers 6, Villé Formation. C-G. Terebratula (Atrypa) megistana Le Hon, 1870 [Calvinaria megistana (Le Hon, 1870)], RBINS a2760 (neotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views; Durbuy 8319, Neuville Formation. H-Q. Rhynchonella parvula Béclard, 1891 [Tetratomia? parvula (Béclard, 1891)]; Rochefort 8679 (2), Eau Noire Formation. H-L. RBINS a1689 (lectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. M-Q. RBINS a1690 (paralectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. Scale bars: 10 mm (A-G), 1 mm (H-Q).
222Terebratula (Atrypa) megistana Le Hon, 1870
223(Fig. 8C-G)
2241870 Terebratula (Atrypa D’Orb.) megistana Le Hon: 496-497, pl. 11, fig. 7, 7a.
2251988 Calvinaria megistana (Le Hon, 1870); Sartenaer: 34-46, text-fig. 1, pl. 1, figs 1-3, pl. 2, figs 4-6, pl. 3, figs 7-13, pl. 4, figs 14-21 (see this author for a complete synonymy of this species).
2261999 Calvinaria megistana; Godefroid & Sartenaer in Boulvain et al.: 21-22, figs BIO6-7.
2272005a Calvinaria megistana (Le Hon, 1870); Mottequin: 2, 41, 104-105, 329, 376, text-fig. 3.20, pl. 2, figs 11-15.
228Type material. A neotype (RBINS a2760) was selected, discussed and illustrated by Sartenaer (1988, pl. 1, fig. 2a-e); it is re-illustrated here (Fig. 8C-G).
229Type locality and type horizon. Durbuy 8319, Neuville Formation (late Frasnian).
230Description. See Le Hon (1870) and Sartenaer (1988).
231Remarks. This species, which ranks among the largest Frasnian rhynchonellides, was assigned to the leiorhynchid genus Calvinaria Stainbrook, 1945 by Stainbrook (1948) and described in detail by Sartenaer (1988).
232Current name. Calvinaria megistana (Le Hon, 1870).
233Rhynchonella moresnetensis de Koninck, 1887
2341887 Rhynchonella Moresnetensis de Koninck: 58-59, 145, table (unnumbered), pl. 13, figs 17-18.
2351975 Araratella moresnetensis (de Koninck, L.-G., 1887); Sartenaer & Plodowski: 10-27, fig. (unnumbered), pl. 1, figs 1-5, pl. 2, figs 1-4, pl. 3, figs 1-16 (see these authors for a complete synonymy before 1975).
2361983 Araratella moresnetensis; Sartenaer in Robaszynski & Dupuis: pl. 2, fig. 3.
2371986 Araratella moresnetensis; Conil et al.: 22-23, table 1, fig. 3.
2381995 Araratella moresnetensis (de Koninck); Legrand-Blain: 79, table 1.
2392003 Araratella moresnetensis; Sartenaer & Plodowski: 341.
2402016 Araratella moresnetensis (de Koninck, 1887); Mottequin & Brice: 125, fig. 5L-P.
241Type material. The distorted articulated specimen (RBINS a1162) illustrated by de Koninck (1887, pl. 13, figs 17-18) was selected as the lectotype by Sartenaer and Plodowski (1975, pl. 1, fig. 4a-e), but has not been traced yet in the RBINS collection.
242Type locality and horizon. Astenet, Dolhain Formation (latest Famennian).
243Description. See de Koninck (1887) and Sartenaer & Plodowski (1975).
244Remarks. This species is an excellent guide in the field to recognize the uppermost Famennian in southern Belgium (Sartenaer & Plodowski, 1975; Mottequin & Brice, 2016). Besides, Sartenaer & Plodowski (1975) discussed the Famennian species Rhynchonella mourloni Simoens, 1900, which has to be considered as a nomen nudum.
245Current name. Araratella moresnetensis (de Koninck, 1887).
246Rhynchonella parvula Béclard, 1891
247(Fig. 8H-Q)
2481891 Rhynchonella parvula Béclard: 97-98, 99, 100, pl. 3, figs 1-2.
2491913 Retzia? parvula; Maillieux: 10, 14.
2501922a Retzia parvula; Maillieux: 14.
2511933 Ptychospira parvula (Béclard); Maillieux: 66.
2521941b Ptychospira parvula (Béclard); Maillieux: 12.
2531965 ‘Rhynchonella’ parvula Béclard 1891; Godefroid: B88, pl. (unnumbered), figs 4, 5a-c.
2541967 Tetratomia parvula; Lecompte: 30, 43, pls 6, 16.
2551968 Tetratomia? parvula (Béclard, 1891); Godefroid: cited many times, pls 4-5, 8-9.
2561970 Tetratomia? parvula; Bultynck: cited many times, pls 36, 37.
2571970 Tetratomia parvula; Lecompte: 62, table 2.
2581971 Tetratomia? parvula; Tsien: 123.
2591982 Tetratomia parvula; Bultynck et al.: 32-33, text-fig. 1.
2601983 Tetratomia parvula; Rzhonsnitskaya: 7, 9, table 1.
2611983 Tetratomia parvula; Sartenaer in Robaszynski & Dupuis: 193, pl. 2, fig. 20.
2621983 Tetratomia parvula; Vandenven & Godefroid in Robaszynski & Dupuis: 126.
2631994 Tetratomia parvula (Béclard, 1891); Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 17, fig. 11.
264Type material. The articulated specimen RBINS a1689 (Béclard, 1891, pl. 3, fig. 1; Godefroid, 1965, fig. 5a-c; Sartenaer in Robaszynski & Dupuis, 1983, pl. 2, fig. 20) is hereby designated as the lectotype and figured in Figure 8H-L. The articulated specimen RBINS a1690 (Béclard, 1891, pl. 3, fig. 2) is a paralectotype (Fig. 8M-Q). Béclard’s (1891) drawings are clearly embellished.
265Type locality and horizon. Rochefort 8679 (2), Eau Noire Formation (late Emsian).
266Description. See Béclard (1891) and Godefroid (1965).
267Remarks. The Jurassic species Rhynchonella parvula Eudes-Deslongchamps, 1862 (the type species of Parvirhynchia Buckman, 1918; see also Alméras & Lathuilière, 1984) and Rhynchonella parvula Béclard, 1891 from the Devonian of southern Belgium are primary homonyms (Articles 53.3, 57.2 of the Code). According to the Article 23.9.5 of the Code and the current survey of the literature, it appears that the Devonian species was not considered as belonging to the same genus after 1899, thus in order to preserve the nomenclature stability, Béclard’s specific name is not replaced. From Lecompte (1967), Béclard’s species has been transferred (doubtfully or otherwise) to Tetratomia Schmidt, 1946 by subsequent workers. Godefroid (1965) and García-Alcalde in Arbizu et al. (1979) considered the German species Rhynchonella amanshauseri Dahmer, 1923 as a synonym of Béclard’s species, but this opinion was not accepted by Brice (1981), who was not convinced that the latter belongs to Tetratomia. The species parvula was listed on many occasions in the Emsian of the Cantabrian Mountains (Spain), notably by García-Alcalde (2015). However, Tetratomia? parvula urgently needs to be revised (internal features unknown, except the presence of a long dorsal septum illustrated by Godefroid (1965, fig. 4)) and its conspecificity with the Spanish form has to be confirmed (or otherwise) (J.L. García-Alcalde, pers. com., November 2018). That is why the Spanish records are not included in the synonymy list.
268Current name. Tetratomia? parvula (Béclard, 1891).
269Plethorhyncha? percostata Fuchs, var. gdoumontensis Asselberghs, 1930
270(Fig. 9A-T)
2711929 Plethoryncha? [sic] percostata Fuchs var. gdoumontensis Asselberghs [nomen nudum]: 758.
2721930 Plethoryncha? [sic] percostata Fuchs, var. gdoumontensis Asselberghs: 33-34, 62.
2731930 Plethorhyncha? percostata Fuchs, var. gdoumontensis Asselberghs: pl. 3, figs 20-24.
2741941a Camarotoechia percostata gdoumontensis (Asselberghs); Maillieux: 8.
2751942 Camarotoechia sinuosa (A. Fuchs 1923); Dahmer: 119, 129-132.
2761943a Plethorhyncha? percostata var. gdoumontensis; Asselberghs: 7, 9.
2771946 Camarotoechia sinuosa Fuchs; Asselberghs: 328.
2781960 ‘Camarotoechia’ sinuosa (Fuchs, 1923); Boucot: 309-310, tables 2, 3, pl. 15, figs 5-15, pl. 16, figs 1-2.
2791973 Bathyrhyncha sinuosa gdoumontensis (Asselberghs 1930); Struve: 352, 357, fig. 17a-b.
2801994 Bathyrhyncha sinuosa Fuchs, 1923; Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 17, fig. 13.
281Type material. The internal mould of a dorsal valve (RBINS a3226; Fig. 9A-D) figured by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 3, fig. 24) is hereby designated as the lectotype. The paralectotypes includes the external moulds of ventral and dorsal valves (RBINS a544 (also illustrated by Boucot, 1960, pl. 15, fig. 9); Fig. 9E-H), the internal and external moulds of a ventral valve (RBINS a3223; Fig. 9I-K), and the ventral internal moulds (RBINS a3224-3225; Fig. 9L-O, P-T) that were illustrated by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 3, figs 20-23).
282Type locality and horizon. Malmedy 12 (Gdoumont), Marteau Formation, Waimes Member (earliest Gedinnian; Pridoli).
283Description. See Asselberghs (1930), Dahmer (1942), and Boucot (1960).
284Remarks. Asselberghs (1930) erected a new variety for ‘Rhynchonella’ percostata Fuchs, 1919, a species which was assigned by Brice (1986) to her new genus Pachanchorhynchia. According to Dahmer (1942, 1951), Asselberghs’ (1930) variety is identical with Bathyrhyncha sinuosa Fuchs, 1923 (see Table 1), an opinion followed by Asselberghs (1943a) and Boucot (1960).
285Current name. Bathyrhyncha sinuosa Fuchs, 1923.
Figure 9. A-T. Plethorhyncha? percostata Fuchs, var. gdoumontensis Asselberghs, 1930 [Bathyrhyncha sinuosa Fuchs, 1923]; Malmedy 12 (Gdoumont), Marteau Formation (Waimes Member). A-D. RBINS a3226 (lectotype), internal mould of a dorsal valve in plan, lateral, oblique lateral and posterior views. E-H. RBINS a544, putty cast of the external moulds of ventral and dorsal valves in different views. I-K. RBINS a3223, putty cast of a ventral valve in plan view, and internal mould of a ventral valve in in plan and inclined plan views. L-O. RBINS a3224, internal mould of a ventral valve in plan, lateral, posterior and anterior views. P-T. RBINS a3225, internal mould of a ventral valve in plan, lateral, posterior and anteroventral views and close-up of the umbonal region (Q, SEM). U-DD. Leiorhynchus tumidus var. quadricostata Maillieux, 1930 [Ryocarhynchus tumidus (Kayser, 1872)]; Sautour 7605, Matagne Formation. U-Y. RBINS a10301A (lectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. Z-DD. RBINS a10301C, articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. Scale bars: 5 mm (A-D, E-I, J-P, R-T), 2 mm (Q), 10 mm (U-DD).
286Leiorhynchus tumidus var. quadricostata Maillieux, 1930
287(Fig. 9U-DD)
2881930 Leiorhynchus tumidus (Kayser) var. quadricostata Maillieux: 108-109, pl. 3, fig. 4a-b.
2891936b Leiorhynchus tumidus (Kayser) var. quadricostata Maillieux; Maillieux: 24.
2901941b Leiorhynchus tumidus quadricostatus Maillieux; Maillieux: 9.
2911968 Leiorhynchus tumidus (Kayser) var. quadricostata Maillieux; Sartenaer: 8.
292Type material. The specimen RBINS a10301A (Maillieux, 1930, pl. 3, fig. 4a; Sartenaer, 1968, pl. 1, fig. 4a-e) was selected as the lectotype (Fig. 9U-Y) of Maillieux’s variety by Sartenaer (1968) (see remarks below). According to the Article 74.1.3 of the Code, the specimens RBINS a10301C (Sartenaer, 1968, pl. 1, fig. 3a-e; Fig. 9Z-DD) and RBINS a10301B (lost!) (Maillieux, 1930, pl. 3, fig. 4b) are paralectotypes of this variety.
293Type locality and horizon. Sautour 7605, Matagne Formation (late Frasnian).
294Description. See Maillieux (1930, 1936b).
295Remarks. Conformably to the Article 45.6.4 of the Code, Sartenaer (1968) pointed out that both varieties (Leiorhynchus tumidus var. quadricostata and L. tumidus var. tricostata) erected by Maillieux (1930) have a subspecific rank. Sartenaer (1968) considered them as synonyms of Camarophoria tumida Kayser, 1872, which is the type species of the genus Ryocarhynchus Sartenaer, 1984 and particularly abundant at the end of the Frasnian in southern Belgium, northern France and western Germany (Sartenaer, 1968, 1974b; Mottequin & Poty, 2016) but also in the upper Frasnian of southern Poland (Baliński 1979, 2002).
296Current name. Ryocarhynchus tumidus (Kayser, 1872).
297Leiorhynchus tumidus var. tricostata Maillieux, 1930
2981930 Leiorhynchus tumidus (Kayser) var. tricostata Maillieux: 108, pl. 3, fig. 3a-b.
2991936b Leiorhynchus tumidus (Kayser) var. tricostata Maillieux; Maillieux: 23.
3001941b Leiorhynchus tumidus tricostatus Maillieux; Maillieux: 9.
3011968 Leiorhynchus tumidus var. tricostata Maillieux; Sartenaer: 8.
302Type material. Sartenaer (1968) selected the specimen RBINS a10300 (Maillieux, 1930, pl. 3, fig. 3a-b) as the lectotype of Maillieux’s variety (see remarks above related to Leiorhynchus tumidus var. quadricostata), but it has not been traced in the RBINS collections.
303Type locality and horizon. Sautour 7605, Matagne Formation (late Frasnian).
304Description. See Maillieux (1930, 1936b).
305Remarks. See Leiorhynchus tumidus var. quadricostata.
306Current name. Ryocarhynchus tumidus (Kayser, 1872).
4.8. Order Athyridida
307Retzia crassicosta Maillieux, 1932
308(Fig. 10A-C)
3091932 Retzia crassicosta Maillieux: 59, pl. 2, fig. 6.
3101933 Retzia crassicosta Maillieux; Maillieux: 59.
3111941a Retzia crassicosta Maillieux; Maillieux: 12, 59.
3121941b Retzia crassicosta Maillieux; Maillieux: 12.
3131946 Retzia crassicosta Maillieux; Asselberghs: 247, 330.
3141989 Retzia crassicosta Mailieux [sic], 1932; Grunt: 90.
315Type material. Maillieux (1932, pl. 2, fig. 6) illustrated an internal mould of a dorsal valve (RBINS a973; Fig. 10A-C), but failed to designate a holotype. As he clearly stated that this specimen is the single one available, it has thus to be considered as the holotype by monotypy.
316Type locality and horizon. Vireux-Molhain 2 (France), base of the Hierges Formation according to Godefroid & Stainier (1988) (late Emsian).
317Description. See Maillieux (1932).
318Remarks. This poorly known species, which differs from Retzia adrieni (de Verneuil & d’Archiac, 1845) in the number of costae and the subtriangular outline of the dorsal valve according to Maillieux (1932), needs to be revised on the basis of further material.
319Current name. Retzia crassicosta Maillieux, 1932.
Figure 10. A-C. Retzia crassicosta Maillieux, 1932, RBINS a973 (holotype), internal mould of a dorsal valve in plan, lateral and anterodorsal views; Vireux-Molhain 2, Hierges Formation. D-V. Athyris dorlodoti Asselberghs, 1923; Chênée 5381 (Tilff), Pépinster Formation. D-G. ULg.PA.2018.12.23/1 (paralectotype), internal mould of a ventral valve in plan, posteroventral, slightly inclined lateral and anterior views. H-L. RBINS a3167 (lectotype), internal mould of a ventral valve in ventral, lateral, posterior and anterior views, and putty cast of exterior. M-V. RBINS a3168 (paralectotype), internal mould of a dorsal exterior in plan, lateral, posterior and anterior views (M-P), putty cast of interior in plan, anterodorsal, and oblique lateral views (Q-S), putty cast of exterior in plan, lateral and posterior views. Scale bars are 5 mm.
320Athyris dorlodoti Asselberghs, 1923
321(Fig. 10D-V)
322p 1895 Athyris concentrica, v. Buch; Kayser: 207, pl. 3, figs 8-9.
3231922 Athyris Dorlodoti Asselberghs [nomen nudum]: B132, B134.
3241923 Athyris Dorlodoti Asselberghs: 11, 34-35, 58, 59, tables 1-2, pl. 2, figs 6-8.
3251933 Athyris Dorlodoti; Maillieux: 67.
3261938 Athyris Dorlodoti Asselberghs; Maillieux: 12.
3271941b Athyris dorlodoti Asselberghs; Maillieux: 12.
3281955 Athyris dorlodoti Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 209.
3291977 Athyris dorlodoti (E. Asselberghs, 1923); Bultynck & Boonen: 492.
3301989 Athyris dorlodoti Asselberghs, 1929 [sic]; Grunt: 83.
331Type material. Asselberghs (1923, legend of pl. 2, figs 6-8) considered the illustrated specimens as the types but he did not select a holotype. The internal mould of a ventral valve (with external mould) (RBINS a3167; Fig. 10H-L) figured by Asselberghs (1923, pl. 2, fig. 7a-b), which seems to have been deformed by fish bites, is hereby selected as the lectotype. The internal mould of a ventral valve (ULg.PA.2018.12.23/1; Fig. 10D-G) figured by Kayser (1895, pl. 3, fig. 8) and Asselberghs (1923, pl. 2, fig. 6), and that of an incomplete dorsal valve with external mould (RBINS a3168; Fig. 10L-V) illustrated by Asselberghs (1923, pl. 2, fig. 8a-c) are paralectotypes.
332Type locality and horizon. Chênée 5381 (Tilff), Pépinster Formation (Eifelian–Givetian).
333Description. See Asselberghs (1923).
334Remarks. This species with a long dorsal myophragm is abundant within the Pépinster and Rivière formations according to Asselberghs (1923), but needs to be revised in order to be compared validly with the numerous athyridid species recognized in the Eifelian of western Germany (Struve, 1992; Alvarez et al., 1996; Grunt & Weyer, 2016).
335Current name. Athyris dorlodoti Asselberghs, 1923.
336Retzia gdoumontensis Asselberghs, 1930
337(Fig. 11A-D)
3381929 Retzia gdoumontensis Asselberghs [nomen nudum]: 758.
3391930 Retzia gdoumontensis Asselberghs: 41, 63, pl. 5, figs 5-6.
3401933 Retzia gdoumontensis Asselberghs; Maillieux: 43.
3411941b Retzia gdoumontensis Asselberghs; Maillieux: 12.
3421942 Retzia gdoumontensis Asselberghs; Dahmer: 120.
3431943a Retzia gdoumontensis Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 10.
3441943b Retzia gdoumontensis Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 7, 10, 12.
3451946 Retzia gdoumontensis Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 328.
3461960 Homeospira gdoumontensis (Asselberghs, 1930); Boucot: 317-318, tables 2, 3, pl. 17, figs 10-15.
3471967 Homeospira gdoumontensis; Lecompte: 29.
3481982 Homeospira gdoumontensis (Asselberghs, E., 1930); Godefroid: 126, table 3.
3491989 Homeospira gdoumontensis Asselberghs, 1903 [sic]; Grunt: 91.
3501994 Homeospira gdoumontensis (Asselberghs, 1930); Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 19, fig. 13.
3511999 Homeospira gdoumontensis; Godefroid & Cravatte: 12-13, table 1.
352Type material. The external mould of a dorsal valve (RBINS a3245; Fig. 11A-B) figured by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 5, fig. 5) is hereby designated as the lectotype whereas the external mould of a ventral valve (RBINS a3246; Fig. 11C-D) illustrated in Asselberghs (1930, pl. 5, fig. 6) is a paralectotype.
353Type locality and horizon. Malmedy 9 (Ovifat), Marteau Formation, Waimes Member (earliest Gedinnian; Pridoli).
354Description. See Asselberghs (1930) and Boucot (1960).
355Remarks. Markedly better preserved material was figured by Boucot (1960), who assigned Asselberghs’ (1930) species to Homeospira Hall & Clarke, 1893.
356Current name. Homeospira gdoumontensis (Asselberghs, 1930).
Figure 11. A-D. Retzia gdoumontensis Asselberghs, 1930 [Homeospira gdoumontensis (Asselberghs, 1930)]; Malmedy 9 (Ovifat), Marteau Formation (Waimes Member). A-B. RBINS a3245, dorsal external mould and putty cast (B; SEM). C-D. RBINS a3246, ventral external mould and putty cast. E-J. Meristella straeleni Asselberghs, 1930 [Protathyris? straeleni (Asselberghs, 1930)], syntypes illustrated by Asselberghs (1930); Marteau Formation (Waimes Member). E-G. RBINS a3247, juvenile ventral valve in ventral, oblique lateral and posteroventral views (SEM) (this specimen was rejected from the species by Boucot (1960)); Malmedy 12 (Gdoumont). H-J. Meristella straeleni Asselberghs, 1930, RBINS a583, dorsal valve in posterodorsal, dorsal and lateral views; Malmedy 9 (Ovifat). K-W. Spirifer beaujeani Béclard, 1887 [Filispirifer? beaujeani (Béclard, 1887)], RBINS a1254 (lectotype), internal mould of a dorsal valve in plan, lateral, posterior, anterior, and anterodorsal views (K-O), latex cast of dorsal internal mould in plan and oblique lateral views, detail of the cardinalia (P-R), latex cast of dorsal external mould (with bryozoans and tabulates) in plan, lateral, posterior and anterior views (S-V), and close-up of the left dorsal flank showing the microornament and the bryozoans (W); Saint-Hubert 3 (23), Villé Formation. Scale bar: 2.5 mm (A-B), 4 mm (C-D, H-J, W), 2 mm (E-G), 5 mm (R), 10 mm (K-Q, S-V).
357Meristella straeleni Asselberghs, 1930
358(Fig. 11H-J)
3591929 Meristella Straeleni Asselberghs [nomen nudum]: 758.
360p 1930 Meristella Straeleni Asselberghs: 42, 63, pl. 5, figs 7-8 (see remarks below).
3611933 Meristella Staeleni [sic] [corrected in the erratum]; Maillieux: 43.
3621941b Meristella straeleni Asselberghs; Maillieux: 11.
3631942 Meristella straeleni Asselberghs; Dahmer: 120.
3641943a Meristella straeleni Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 10.
3651943b Meristella straeleni Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 4, 7, 10, 12.
3661946 Meristella straeleni Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 328.
3671960 Protathyris? straeleni (Asselberghs, 1930); Boucot: 312-313, tables 2, 3, pl. 18, figs 15-16.
3681982 Protathyris? Straeleni (Asselberghs, E., 1930); Godefroid: 126, table 3.
3691989 Meristella straeleni Asselberghs, 1930; Grunt: 81.
3701994 Protathyris? straeleni (Asselberghs, 1930); Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 19, fig. 13.
3711999 ?Protathyris straeleni (Asselberghs, 1930); Godefroid & Cravatte: 9, table 1, figs 3-4.
372Type material. The illustrated syntypes include the dorsal internal mould (RBINS a583; Fig. 11H-J) illustrated by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 5, fig. 8) and Boucot (1960, pl. 18, fig. 16) and a poorly preserved internal mould of a juvenile ventral valve (RBINS a3247; Fig. 11E-G) figured by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 5, fig. 7). The latter was rejected from the species straeleni by Boucot (1960, see his synonymy list), but not discussed. No lectotype is selected at this stage (see the discussion of the species pruvosti in paragraph 4.11).
373Type locality and horizon. Malmedy 9 (Ovifat), Marteau Formation, Waimes Member (earliest Gedinnian; Pridoli).
374Description. See Asselberghs (1930) and Boucot (1960).
375Remarks. This species was doubtfully referred to Protathyris Kozłowski, 1929 by Boucot (1960), who pointed out the absence of ventral valve in the available material. He assigned the dorsal internal mould RBINS a582 (Asselberghs, 1930, pl. 4, fig. 3; Boucot, 1960, pl. 18, fig. 15; Fig. 19L-Q), which was part of the type material of Dielasma pruvosti Asselberghs, 1930, to P? straeleni (see a more detailed discussion in paragraph 4.11 concerning the species pruvosti).
376Current name. Protathyris? straeleni (Asselberghs, 1930).
4.9. Order Atrypida
377Atrypa gedinniana Fuchs, 1934
378(Fig. 12A-G)
3791876 Atrypa reticularis Linn.; de Koninck: 44.
3801929 Atrypa lorana Fuchs; Asselberghs: 758.
3811930 Atrypa lorana Fuchs; Asselberghs: 35-36, 63, pl. 4, figs 4-6.
3821934 Atrypa gedinniana Fuchs: 402, 404.
383p 1941b Atrypa lorana Fuchs; Maillieux: 11 (only those from the ‘Gedinnian’).
3841942 Atrypa gedinniana A. Fuchs, 1934; Dahmer: 142, figs 18-19.
3851943a Atrypa gedinniana A. Fuchs; Asselberghs: 7-8, 10.
3861943b Atrypa gedinniana; Asselberghs: 7, 8, 10, 12.
3871946 Atrypa gedinniana Fuchs; Asselberghs: 328.
3881951 Atrypa gedinniana Fuchs 1934; Dahmer: 114, pl. 2, fig. 24a-c.
3891960 Atrypa gedinniana Fuchs, 1934; Boucot: 310-311, pl. 16, figs 3-6, tables 2-3.
3901982 Atrypa gedinniana Fuchs, A., 1934; Godefroid: 126, table 3.
3911985 Atrypa (? Atrypa) gedinniana Fuchs 1934; Copper & Rachebœuf: 66, 74, text-fig. 5, pl. 5, figs 1-13.
3921994 Atrypa (? Atrypa) gedinniana (Fuchs, 1934) [sic]; Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 17, fig. 11.
3931999 Atrypa (?Atrypa) gedinniana (Fuchs, 1934) [sic]; Godefroid & Cravatte: 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, table 1, figs 3, 4.
394Type material. The ventral external and internal moulds (RBINS a3231; Fig. 12A-C) illustrated by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 4, fig. 5a-b) was selected by Dahmer (1942) as the lectotype and re-illustrated by Copper & Rachebœuf (1985, pl. 5, figs 1-3). The specimens RBINS a3230 (Asselberghs, 1930, pl. 4, fig. 4a-b; Copper & Rachebœuf, 1985, pl. 5, figs 6, 8-9; Fig. 12E-G) and a3232 (Asselberghs, 1930, pl. 4, fig. 6; Copper & Rachebœuf, 1985, pl. 5, figs 4-5; Fig. 12D) are paralectotypes.
395Type locality and horizon. Malmedy 9 (Ovifat), Marteau Formation, Waimes Member (earliest Gedinnian; Pridoli).
396Description. See Asselberghs (1930), Fuchs (1934), Dahmer (1942), Boucot (1960), and Copper & Rachebœuf (1985).
397Remarks. This species is one of the rare representatives of the Order Atrypida within the Pridolian–Emsian siliciclastic succession of southern Belgium (Godefroid in Godefroid et al., 1994). The specimens from the upper Emsian of the Armorican Massif (France) doubtfully assigned to Fuchs’ species by Copper (1981) were subsequently considered as a new species (Atrypa (A.) lezaisensis) by Copper & Rachebœuf (1985).
398Current name. Atrypa (Atrypa?) gedinniana Fuchs, 1934.
Figure 12. Atrypa gedinniana Fuchs, 1934 [Atrypa (Atrypa?) gedinniana Fuchs, 1934], Malmedy 9 (Ovifat), Marteau Formation (Waimes Member). A-C. RBINS a3231 (lectotype), ventral interior in plan view, ventral exterior (putty cast) in plan view, and ventral interior in oblique lateral view. D. RBINS a3232, dorsal interior in plan view (skirt partly preserved). E-G. RBINS a3230, dorsal interior of a juvenile specimen in plan and oblique posterior views, and ventral exterior (putty cast) in plan view. Scale bars: 5 mm.
4.10. Order Spiriferida
399Spirifer beaujeani Béclard, 1887
400(Figs 11K-W, 13A-F)
4011887 Spirifer Beaujeani Béclard: 64, 73, pl. 3, figs 1-3.
4021896a Spirifer Beaujeani F. Béclard, 1887; Béclard: 141, 146, pl. 11, fig. 3, 3a (= copy of Béclard, 1887, pl. 3, figs 1-2).
4031896b Spirifer Beaujeani F. Béclard, 1887; Béclard: 265.
404p 1910b Spirifer primaevus Stein.; Maillieux: 194.
405p 1910c Spirifer primaevus Steininger; Maillieux: 345-348, 372, 376.
4061963 Acrospirifer beaujeani (F. Béclard, 1887); Vandercammen: 6-12, 149, 152, text-figs 1-3, pl. 1, figs 1-12.
4071967 Acrospirifer beaujani [sic]; Lecompte: 42, pl. 15.
4081970 Acrospirifer beaujeani (Béclard, F., 1887); Vandercammen & Vandercammen-Goffinet: 6, 73.
4091982 Acrospirifer beaujani [sic]; Godefroid & Stainier: 156-157, table 2a-b.
4101989 A. [Acrospirifer] beaujani [sic] (Béclard, 1887); Gourvennec: 66-67.
4111994 Acrospirifer beaujani [sic] (Béclard, 1887); Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 17, fig. 11.
4122001a Filispirifer? beaujeani (Béclard 1887); Jansen: 271, 272, 283, 284.
4132001b ‘Spirifer’ beaujeani Béclard, 1887; Jansen: 132, 133, 134, 138.
4142008 ?Filispirifer beaujeani (Béclard, 1887); Schemm-Gregory: 63, 65, table 1.
415Type material. The external and internal moulds of a dorsal valve (RBINS a1254; Fig. 11K-W) illustrated by Béclard (1887, pl. 3, figs 1-2; 1896a, pl. 11, figs 3, 3a) and Vandercammen (1963, pl. 1, figs 1-6) was designated as the hololectotype [sic] (= lectotype) by Vandercammen (1963). The paralectotype (paratype in Vandercammen, 1963) corresponds to the incomplete external mould of a ventral valve figured by Béclard (1887, pl. 3, fig. 3) and Vandercammen (1963, pl. 1, fig. 10). The external and internal moulds of a ventral valve (RBINS a1930; Fig. 13G-H) considered as a paratype by Vandercammen (1963, pl. 1, figs 7-9) cannot be regarded as such as it does not be part of Béclard’s (1887) original material as it was sold to the RBINS by Maillieux in 1912.
416Type locality and horizon. Saint-Hubert 3 (23), Villé Formation (Siegenian; Pragian).
417Description. See Béclard (1887) and Vandercammen (1963).
418Remarks. Soon after its first description, the autonomy of this species was challenged by several authors notably Frech (1889) and Barrois (1889). Eventually Béclard (1896a, 1896b) considered it as a synonym of Acrospirifer primaevus (Steininger, 1853) as did Maillieux (1910b; 1931, see his synonymy list of Steininger’s species). An opinion followed by Gourvennec (1989), who considered that the material identified and illustrated by Vandercammen (1963) as Acrospirifer beaujeani should correspond to juvenile specimens of A. primaevus (Steininger, 1853), the type species of Acrospirifer Helmbrecht & Wedekind, 1923. The species was still considered as distinct from primaevus and assigned to Acrospirifer notably by Carls in Brice et al. (2000). Careful re-examination of the type material of Béclard’s species by Jansen (2001a, 2001b), very clearly revealing a capillate micro-ornamentation, led him to doubtfully assign the Belgian species to Filispirifer Jansen, 2001a (see also Schemm-Gregory, 2008).
419From the palaeobiological viewpoint, the lectotype of F? beaujeani shows numerous epizoans (bryozoans, tabulate corals) fixed both on the external and internal faces of the dorsal valve, reflecting post-mortem encrustation and maybe also during the life of the animal. These epizoans were not illustrated by Béclard (1887) and the poor quality of Vandercammen’s (1963) pictures does not allow observing them easily. In Belgium, although Lower Devonian epizoans attached to bivalves were illustrated by Maillieux (1909c), it is the first time that Lower Devonian brachiopods with epizoans are documented whereas such associations were reported in the Upper Devonian (Lecompte, 1939; Mottequin, 2008a; Mottequin et al., 2016) and especially in the Tournaisian (Mottequin & Simon, 2017a, 2017b) successions of this country.
420Current name. Filispirifer? beaujeani (Béclard, 1887).
Figure 13. A-H. Spirifer beaujeani Béclard, 1887 [Filispirifer? beaujeani (Béclard, 1887)]. A-F. RBINS a1255 (paralectotype), incomplete external mould of a ventral valve, and putty cast in plan, lateral, posterior, anterior, and oblique lateraloventral (partim) views; Saint-Hubert 3 (23), Villé Formation. G-H. RBINS a1930, latex cast of ventral exterior (tabulates on the right flank, close to the posterior margin), and flattened, incomplete ventral internal mould; Neufchâteau 8449, Villé Formation. I-P. Spirifer bisinus Le Hon, 1870 [Geminisulcispirifer bisinus (Le Hon, 1870)], RBINS a2301 (lectotype), close-up of the pseudodeltidium in posterior and oblique lateral views (ventral valve on top) (I-J), almost complete articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views (K-O), and detail of the spinose microornamentation on fold and flanks (P); Givet (Fort de Charlemont), Nismes Formation (La Prée Member). Q-U. Spirifer ferrierensis Maillieux, 1938 [‘Spirifer’ ferrierensis Maillieux, 1938], RBINS a1123 (holotype), external mould of a ventral valve and plastilina cast in plan, anteroventral, lateral and posteroventral views; Ferrières 8351, Lomme Formation. Scale bars: 5 mm (A, B-G, K-O, Q-U), 10 mm (H) and 1 mm (I-J, P).
421Spirifer bisinus Le Hon, 1870
422(Fig. 13I-P)
4231870 Spirifer bisinus Le Hon: 497-499, pl. 11, fig. 9.
4241982 Geminisulcispirifer bisinus (Le Hon, H., 1870); Sartenaer: 125-130, 149-153, table 1, pl. 1, figs 1-6, pl. 2, fig. 1 (see this author for a more complete synonymy prior 1982).
4251999 Geminisulcispirifer bisinus; Godefroid & Sartenaer in Boulvain et al.: 21-23, figs BIO6-8.
4262000 Cyrtospirifer (Geminisulcispirifer) bisinus; Bultynck et al.: fig. 12.
4272006 Geminisulcispirifer bisinus (Le Hon, 1870); Johnson: 1727, fig. 1132, 2a-e (copy of Sartenaer, 1982, pl. 1, fig. 1a-e).
428Type material. The specimen RBINS a2301 (Vandercammen, 1968, pl. 2, fig. 7) was selected as the lectotype by Sartenaer (1982, p. 150, pl. 1, fig 1a-e) and is fully re-illustrated herein (Fig. 13I-P). The paralectotypes RBINS a2302, a2303, and 2304 (Le Hon, 1870, pl. 11, fig. 9; Vandercammen, 1959a, pl. 4, fig. 7-10) were illustrated by Sartenaer (1982, pl. 1, fig. 2a-e, 3a-e, 5a-e) (see Sartenaer (1982) for more information related to the types).
429Type locality and horizon. Givet (Fortress of Charlemont; France), Formation de Nismes, La Prée Member (early Frasnian).
430Description. See Le Hon (1870), Vandercammen (1959a, 1968), and Sartenaer (1982).
431Remarks. Le Hon’s (1870) species is the type species of Geminisulcispirifer Sartenaer, 1982, which was described originally as a subgenus of Cyrtospirifer Nalivkin in Frederiks 1924 by Sartenaer (1982), although he did not follow the Article 6 of the Code.
432Current name. Geminisulcispirifer bisinus (Le Hon, 1870).
433Spirifer ferrierensis Maillieux, 1938
434(Fig. 13Q-U)
4351938 Spirifer (Spirifer?) ferrierensis Maillieux: 23, 41, pl. 2, fig. 5, 5a.
4361941d Spirifer ferrierensis Maillieux; Maillieux: 4.
4371970 Spirifer ferrierensis Maillieux, E., 1938; Vandercammen & Vandercammen-Goffinet: 25.
438Type material. The holotype (RBINS a1123; Fig. 13Q-U), which corresponds to an incomplete ventral external mould, was selected and figured by Maillieux (1938, pl. 2, fig. 5, 5a).
439Type locality and horizon. Ferrières 8351, Lomme Formation (Eifelian).
440Description. See Maillieux (1938).
441Remarks. This species is only known by the holotype of which the poor state of preservation precludes a description. Further material is thus required to reach a better generic assignment and valuable comparison with contemporaneous species.
442Current name. ‘Spirifer’ ferrierensis Maillieux, 1938.
443Spirifer gosseleti Béclard, 1887
444(Fig. 14A-X)
4451887 Spirifer Gosseleti Béclard: 64, 81, pl. 4, figs 1-6.
446non 1895a Spirifer Gosseleti Dewalque: 36 (= Uchtospirifer? fraiponti (Dewalque, 1895b)).
4471896a Spirifer Gosseleti Béclard, 1887: Béclard: 159, 165.
448p 1896a Spirifer hystericus-Gosseleti [with or without a hyphen] Béclard; Béclard: 167, pl. 12, figs 1, 1a-b, 2 (copy of Béclard, 1887: pl. 4, figs 1-4), 4, 5-7, 9, non 3, 3a, 8, 10 (see Solle, 1963).
4491896b Spirifer Gosseleti Béclard, 1887; Béclard: 271.
4501908b Spirifer hystericus var. Gosseleti Béclard; Maillieux: 222, 223, 229.
451? 1909c Spirifer hystericus var. Gosseleti; Maillieux: 196.
452p 1910b Spirifer excavatus Kayser; Maillieux: 194.
453p 1910c Spirifer hystericus Schlotheim; Maillieux: 330-332, 371, 376, non figs 1, 1a, 2-3 (copy of Béclard, 1896a, pl. 12, figs 3, 8, 10).
454p 1910c Spirifer excavatus Kayser; Maillieux: 330-332, 376, figs 4-7 (copy of Béclard, 1896a, pl. 12, figs 4-7).
455non 1915 Spirifer gosseletti [sic] Vaughan: 42 (= Sphenospira julii (Dehée, 1929)).
4561922b Spirifer excavatus; Maillieux: 41, fig. 18 (copy of Béclard, 1887, pl. 4, figs 1-4).
4571933 Spirifer (Hysterolites) excavatus; Maillieux: 48, fig. 56a (copy of Béclard, 1887, pl. 4, figs 1-4).
4581963 Spirifer gosseleti Béclard, 1887; Solle: 184-185.
459p 1963 Mauispirifer gosseleti (F. Béclard); Vandercammen: 24-29, text-fig. 14, pl. 4, figs 14-19, 27.
4601967 Manispirifer [sic] gosseleti; Lecompte: 42, pl. 15.
4611970 Mauispirifer gosseleti (Béclard, F., 1887); Vandercammen & Vandercammen-Goffinet: 28-29, 75.
4621982 Mauispirifer gosseleti; Godefroid & Stainier, 142, 155, 156, tables 1, 2a.
4631994 Mauispirifer gosseleti (Béclard, 1887); Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 17, fig. 11.
4642016 Mauispirifer gosseleti (Béclard, 1887); Jansen: 74, 76, 77.
465Type material. The internal and external moulds of a ventral valve (RBINS a1264; Fig. 14A-M) illustrated by Béclard (1887, pl. 4, figs 1-3; 1896a, pl. 12, figs 1a-c), Maillieux (1922b, fig. 18 (ventral valve only); 1933, fig. 56a (same remark)), and Vandercammen (1963, pl. 4, figs 16-18) were selected as the type (= lectotype) by Solle (1963). The paralectotypes correspond to two external moulds of dorsal valves, namely the specimens RBINS a1265 (Fig. 14R-S) figured by Béclard (1887, pl. 4, fig. 4; 1896a, pl. 12, fig. 2), Maillieux (1922b, fig. 18 (dorsal valve only); 1933, fig. 56a (same remark)), and Vandercammen (1963, pl. 4, fig. 19), and RBINS a1266 (Fig. 14N-Q) illustrated by Béclard (1887, pl. 4, fig. 5) and Vandercammen (1963, pl. 4, figs 14-15). The internal mould of a ventral valve (RBINS a1267) figured by Béclard (1887, pl. 4, fig. 6) has not been traced. The specimen RBINS a1266 was selected as the hololectotype [sic] by Vandercammen (1963) but his publication was released in December 1963, contrary to Solle’s paper that was published in April of the same year (see Jahnke, 1971).
466Type locality and horizon. Saint-Hubert 3 (23), Villé Formation (Siegenian; Pragian).
467Description. See Béclard (1887) and Vandercammen (1963).
468Remarks. Béclard’s (1887) species was assigned to the genus Mauispirifer Allan, 1947 by Vandercammen (1963) and discussed by several authors (Solle, 1963; Jahnke, 1971; Gourvennec, 1989) whose conception of the species differs (see their respective synonymy list). From this viewpoint, two ventral internal moulds (RBINS a1297 (Fig. 14Y-DD), a1298 (Fig. 14T-X)) from the Mirwart Formation (Siegenian; mostly Pragian in age), which were originally identified and illustrated as Hysterolites hystericus gosseleti by Béclard (1896a), were figured on many occasions (see below) in the Belgian literature; they are fully illustrated here. According to Solle (1963), the specimen RBINS a1297 (Béclard, 1896a, pl. 12, fig. 3-3a; Maillieux, 1910c, fig. 1; Vandercammen, 1963, pl. 4, fig. 26) belongs to Hysterolites hystericus pachypleura Solle, 1963, contrary to the specimen RBINS a1298 (Béclard, 1896a, pl. 12, fig. 4; Maillieux, 1910c, fig. 7; Vandercammen, 1963, pl. 4, fig. 27).
469During one meeting of the Société géologique de Belgique (17 December 1894), Dewalque (1895a) proposed to name Spirifer gosseleti the species previously identified as S. orbelianus Abich, 1858 – a Famennian species from Armenia – by Gosselet (1874a, 1874b, 1880, 1888, 1894). Two months later, also during a meeting of the same scientific society (17 February 1895), Dewalque (1895b) introduced a replacement name for S. gosseleti, namely S. fraiponti, as S. gosseleti Dewalque, 1895a was preoccupied by S. gosseleti Béclard, 1887. The specimen illustrated by Gosselet (1880, pl. 4, fig. 4) is probably lost according to Brice (1988). Surprisingly, only a small part of the palaeontological community used Dewalque’s (1895b) name for this emblematic species of the Givetian–Frasnian boundary in the northern France and southern Belgium. Surprisingly, Sartenaer (1974c, 1982), who examined this issue in minute detail, overlooked Dewalque’s publications as did Vandercammen (1959b). Dewalque’s (1895b) species should be referred probably to Uchtospirifer Liashenko, 1957 or to a related genus.
470Dehée (1929) introduced Spirifer julii in order to solve the problem of secondary homonymy created by the introduction of the specific name Spirifer gosseletti [sic] by Vaughan (1915). Dehée’s species is from the uppermost Famennian and referred now to Sphenospira Cooper, 1954 (see Mottequin & Brice (2016) for the selection of the lectotype of S. julii).
471Current name. Mauispirifer gosseleti (Béclard, 1887).
Figure 14. A-X. Spirifer gosseleti Béclard, 1887 [Mauispirifer gosseleti (Béclard, 1887)]; Saint-Hubert 3 (23), Villé Formation (A-S); Couvin 8724, Mirwart Formation (T-X). A-M. RBINS a1264 (lectotype), internal mould of a ventral valve in plan, lateral, posterior and anterior views (A-D), detail of the muscle field and of the septal pillow (E-F; SEM), latex cast of interior in lateral oblique and plan views (G-H; SEM), putty cast of exterior of ventral valve in plan, posterior, anterior and lateral views (I-L), and close-up of the external mould showing the poorly preserved microornamentation (M; SEM). N-Q. RBINS a1266 (paralectotype), oblique lateral view of external mould of a dorsal valve (M), latex cast of external mould in plan, lateral oblique, and anterodorsal views (O-Q). R-S. RBINS a1265 (paralectotype), external mould and putty cast of a dorsal valve in plan views. T-X. RBINS a1298, ventral internal mould in ventral, lateral, posterior, anterior, and oblique anterolateral views; Couvin 8724, Mirwart Formation. Y-DD. Hysterolites hystericus pachypleura Solle, 1963, RBINS a1297, ventral internal mould in ventral, lateral, posterior, anterior, and oblique anterolateral views and detail of remnants of microornament in sulcus; Couvin 8724, Mirwart Formation. Scale bars: 10 mm (A-D, I-L, N-S, T-CC), 2.5 mm (E, DD), 1 mm (F), 5 mm (G-H, M).
472Spirifer mercurii Gosselet, 1880
473(Fig. 15A-D)
4741876 Spirifer hystericus Schlotheim; de Koninck: 40, pl. 1, fig. 8
4751880 Spirifer Mercuri Gosselet: 67.
4761880 Spirifer Mercurii Gosselet: pl. 1, fig. 8.
4771888 Spirifer Mercurii, Goss.; Gosselet: 190.
4781896b Spirifer Mercurii, Gosselet, 1880; Béclard: 274.
4791910c Spirifer Mercurii Gosselet; Maillieux: 329, 371, 376.
4801911 Spirifer Mercurii Gosselet; Maillieux: 176.
4811912a Spirifer sulcatus, Hisinger, 1831; Leriche: 27-29, 50, pl. 1, figs 31-34.
4821912b Spirifer sulcatus, Hisinger (= S. Mercurii, Gosselet) [sic]; Leriche: 329.
4831922a Spirifer sulcatus; Maillieux: 10-11.
4841929 Spirifer Mercurii; Maillieux & Demanet: table 2.
4851930 Spirifer mercuri Gosselet; Asselberghs: 36-38.
4861933 Spirifer (Hysterolites) Mercurii; Maillieux: 43.
4871941d Hysterolites (Hysterolites) mercurii (Gosselet); Maillieux: 3.
4881943b Hysterolites mercurii Gosselet; Asselberghs: 3, 12.
4891946 Hysterolites mercuri Gosselet; Asselberghs: 328.
4901957a Howellella mercuri (Gosselet, 1880); Boucot: 315-317.
4911960 Howellella mercuri (Gosselet, 1880); Boucot: 313-314, tables 2-3, pl. 16, figs 8-12.
4921963 Howellella mercuri (J. Gosselet, 1880); Vandercammen: 116-119, text-figs 75-77, pl. 11, figs 9-16.
4931967 Howellella mercuri; Lecompte: 29, 42, pls 5, 15.
4941970 Howellella mercuri (Gosselet, J., 1880); Vandercammen & Vandercammen-Goffinet: 39-40, 75.
4951982 Howellella mercuri (Gosselet, 1880); Godefroid: 102, 126,127, table 3.
4961985 Howellella mercurii (Gosselet, 1880); Gourvennec: 149-154, pl. 1, figs 1-6, 9-10, 13-14, 16-19 fide Gourvennec, 1989) (see this author for a more complete synonymy before 1985).
4971985 Howellella (Howellella) mercurii mercurii (Gosselet, 1880); Carls: 315, pl. 2, figs 36-37.
4981989 Howellella (Howellella) mercurii (Gosselet, 1880); Gourvennec: 73-75, text-fig. 39, pl. 4, figs 7-18.
4991994 Howellella mercuri (Gosselet, 1880); Godefroid: 17, fig. 11.
5001999 Howellella mercuri (Gosselet, 1880); Godefroid & Cravatte: 9-13, 15-16, figs 3-5, pl. 3, figs 8-10.
5012016 Howellella mercurii (Gosselet, 1880); Jansen: 67, 68, 69, 70, figs 3, 4b.
502Type material. Carls (1985) selected the internal mould of a ventral valve (RBINS a556; Fig. 15A-D) as the neotype; it was previously illustrated by Leriche (1912a, pl. 1, fig. 32), Boucot (1960, 16, fig. 10), and Vandercammen (1963, pl. 11, figs 13-14).
503Type locality and horizon. Mondrepuis (France), Mondrepuis Formation (early Gedinnian; Lochkovian).
504Description. See Boucot (1960), Vandercammen (1963), Gourvennec (1985, 1989), and Carls (1985).
505Remarks. As explained by Gourvennec (1985), the correct spelling of Gosselet’s species, which was assigned to Howellella Kozłowski, 1946 by Boucot (1957a), is mercurii (from genitive of Mercurius) instead of mercuri.
506Current name. Howellella (Howellella) mercurii (Gosselet, 1880).
Figure 15. A-D. Spirifer mercurii Gosselet, 1880 [Howellella (Howellella) mercurii (Gosselet, 1880)], RBINS a556 (neotype), incomplete mould of a ventral valve in plan, posterior and anterior views, and detail of the median region (all SEM); Mondrepuis, Mondrepuis Formation. E-F. Spirifer paradoxus var. obliqua Asselberghs, 1913b [Euryspirifer dunensis (Kayser, 1889)]; Recogne (Les Blancs-Cailloux-Royvaux), Villé Formation. E. RBINS a3129 (lectotype), flattened, incomplete internal mould of a dorsal valve in plan view associated to a dorsal internal mould of a spiriferide and to the ventral internal mould of a chonetidine. F. RBINS a3131, flattened, incomplete internal mould of a ventral valve in plan view. G-P. Spirifer pentameroides Stainier, 1887 [Kelusia pentameroides (Stainier, 1887)]; Sombreffe 6189, Bois de Bordeaux Formation (Alvaux Member). G-K. RBINS a1848, articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. L-P. RBINS a1849 articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. Q-U. Cyrtina rigauxi Maillieux, 1909d [Acutatheca rigauxi (Maillieux, 1909d)], RBINS a9575 (lectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views; Couvin M44 (6158B), Neuville Formation. Scale bars: 5 mm (A-D, Q-U), 10 mm (E, F-P).
507Spirifer paradoxus var. obliqua Asselberghs, 1913a
508(Fig. 15E-F)
5091907 [no genus mentioned] Epiparadoxus Greindl: 107, unnumbered fig.
5101913 Spirifer paradoxus var. obliqua Asselberghs [nomen nudum]; Asselberghs in Duvigneaud: 185 (copy of Asselberghs’ (1913a) list of species).
5111913a Spirifer paradoxus var. obliqua Asselberghs: 198-199, 209, figs 1 (copy of Greindl, 1907, unnumbered fig.), 2-3.
5121913b Spirifer paradoxus var. obliqua Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 103, 128, pl. 3, fig. 8.
5131931 Spirifer paraxodus var. obliqua Asselberghs, 1913; Maillieux: 49, 52.
5141931 Spirifer epiparaxodus Greindl, 1907; Maillieux: 49, 52.
5151946 Spirifer pellico Archiac et Verneuil; Asselberghs: fig. 12 (copy of Asselberghs, 1913a, fig. 2).
516p 1994 Euryspirifer dunensis (Kayser, 1889); Godefroid: 63, 70, pl. 6, fig. 11 (copy of Greindl, 1907, unnumbered fig.).
5172001a Euryspirifer sp. 3; Jansen: 194, 216, 220, 221.
518Type material. The incomplete dorsal internal mould (RBINS a3129; Fig. 15E), illustrated by Greindl (1907, unnumbered fig.), Asselberghs (1913a, fig. 1; 1913b, fig. 8) and Godefroid (1994, pl. 6, fig. 11), was considered as the ‘échantillon type’ by Asselberghs (1913b, legend of the pl. 3, fig. 8); it is designated hereby as the lectotype. The ventral internal mould (RBINS a3131; Fig. 15F) figured by Asselberghs (1913a, fig. 3) is a paralectotype whereas the second internal mould of a dorsal valve illustrated by Asselberghs (1913a, fig. 2; 1946, fig. 12) was not traced.
519Type locality and horizon. Recogne (Les Blancs-Cailloux-Royvaux), Villé Formation (Siegenian; Pragian).
520Description. See Asselberghs (1913a, b) and Godefroid (1994).
521Remarks. Greindl (1907) figured a large, incomplete internal mould of a dorsal valve (RBINS a3129; Fig. 15E) from the Neufchâteau area under the name Epiparadoxus [sic], but without description of the specimen. Moreover, the Principle of Binomial Nomenclature (Article 5 of the Code) is not respected (see also below). Asselberghs (1913b), Maillieux (1931), and Godefroid (1994) added the genus Spirifer (between brackets or not) to the epithet epiparadoxus (see their respective discussion and list of synonymy). However, the name Spirifer epiparadoxus Greindl, 1907 as cited by these authors is not available because it does not meet the criteria of availability, especially the Articles 11.4.3 and 11.9.3 of the Code. The specimen figured by Greindl (1907) was included by Asselberghs (1913a) in his Spirifer paradoxus var. obliqua whose name first appeared in Duvigneaud (1913), but without description. According to the Article 45.6.4 of the Code, the epithet obliqua has to be considered as of subspecific rank in Asselberghs’ (1913a) publication. Maillieux (1931) subsequently identified Asselberghs’ restricted material as Spirifer (Acrospirifer) pellico (= Euryspirifer pellicoi (de Verneuil & d’Archiac, 1845)) and considered that they were deformed tectonically, an opinion followed by Godefroid (1994), who transferred them to E. dunensis (Kayser, 1889). In contrast with Maillieux (1931) and Godefroid (1994), Jansen (2001a) included the specimens RBINS a3129 (see above) and a7927 (Godefroid, 1994: pl. 6, fig. 12) in E. sp. 3, but Godefroid (1994)’s opinion is provisionally followed here pending the reinvestigation of the material from the type locality. The other brachiopods observed on the lower and upper surfaces of the slab containing the lectotype clearly show signs of deformation and compaction (see Fig. 15E).
522Current name. Euryspirifer dunensis (Kayser, 1889).
523Spirifer pentameroides Stainier, 1887
524(Fig. 15G-P)
5251879 Pentamerus brevirostris Phil.; Malaise: 35.
5261886 Pentamerus globus, Bronn; de Lapparent: pl. 5, figs 21-22.
5271887 Spirifer pentameroïdes Stainier: 75-80, text-figs A-D, pl. 4, fig. 2a-g.
5281888 Spirifer pentameroïdes; Dormal: 96.
5291892 Spirifer pentameroïdes; Malaise & Stainier: 297, 298.
5301892 Spirifer pentameroides; Malaise: 371.
5311900 Spirifer pentameroides Stainier; Scupin: 249.
5321900 Spirifer pentameroides Stainier; de Dorlodot: 139.
5331910d Spirifer pentameroïdes; Maillieux: 221.
5341922 Spirifer pentameroides; Asselberghs in Kaisin et al.: 84.
5351927 Spirifer pentameroides; Asselberghs in Asselberghs & Maillieux: 186.
5361929 Spirifer pseudopachyrhynchus; Maillieux: 65.
5371929 Spirifer pseudopachyrhynchus; Maillieux & Demanet, table 2.
5381933 Reticularia pseudopachyrhyncha (= Spirifer pentameroides Stainier) [sic]; Maillieux: 71, 76.
5391936 Reticularia pseudopachyrhyncha; Asselberghs: 282, 305.
5401940c Martinia pseudopachyrhyncha (Tschernyschew); Maillieux: 11, 12.
541p 1941d Martinia pseudopachyrhyncha (Tschernyschew); Maillieux: 6 (only those from the Givetian).
542p 1956 Emanuella volhynica A. V. Kelus, 1939; Vandercammen: 35-42, 44, text-figs 29-36, pl. 2, figs 16-32.
5431959b Emanuella pentameroides (X. Stainier, 1887); Vandercammen: 4, 8, 10.
5441970 Emanuella volhynica Kelus, A. von, 1939; Vandercammen & Vandercammen-Goffinet: 72-73, 74.
5452016 Diazoma pentameroides (Stainier, 1887); Mottequin & Godefroid: 154, fig. 117G-I.
546Type material. Contrary to the type material of the trilobite species Dechenella striata described by Stainier (1887) in the same publication, Stainier’s figured specimens of Spirifer pentameroides have not been traced in the RBINS collections until now despite the fact that a label with Stainier’s handwriting has been recovered accompanying fragments of two sectioned specimens and a poorly preserved ventral internal mould (RBINS general inventory no. 11312). Based on the available data, it is impossible to confirm (or otherwise) if these specimens can be considered as syntypes or not. Pending further research within the RBINS collections that may be conclusive, no neotype is selected, but two specimens from the type locality and closely resembling two of those illustrated by Stainier (1887) are figured here (Fig. 15G-P).
547Type locality and horizon. Sombreffe 6189, Bois de Bordeaux Formation, Alvaux Member (Givetian).
548Description. See Stainier (1887) and Vandercammen (1956, partim).
549Remarks. As shown by the synonymy list, Stainier’s (1887) species was firstly identified as a pentameride (Malaise, 1879; de Lapparent, 1886). It was then considered as a synonym of the Uralian species Spirifer pseudopachyrinchus Chernischev, 1887 notably by Scupin (1900) and Maillieux (1929, 1941d) or of the Ukrainian species Emanuella volhynica Kelus, 1939 by Vandercammen (1956), who overlooked the name proposed by Stainier (1887). Eventually Vandercammen (1959b) regarded the species pentameroides as a possible synonym of the Uralian species ‘Spirifer’ pachyrinchus de Verneuil in Murchison et al., 1845 that he assigned to Emanuella Grabau, 1923 in 1923–1924.
550From the generic viewpoint, it is clear that Spirifer pentameroides belongs to the same genus than that of Emanuella volhynica Kelus, 1939, but this complex group of very similar and potentially synonymous species urgently needs to be re-investigated. Furthermore, E. volhynica was selected as the type species of two genera: Diazoma Dürkoop, 1970 and Kelusia Mamedov, 1978. Mamedov’s genus was rightly considered as a synonym of Diazoma Dürkoop, 1970 by Carter et al. (1994) and Johnson & Hou (2006a). Nevertheless, Diazoma Dürkoop, 1970 (Ambocoeliidae according to Zhang & Ma (2019)) is preoccupied by Diazoma Lamarck, 1816 (Tunicata) and Diazoma Wallengren, 1882 (Diptera) (the new name Diazosma Bergroth, 1913 was proposed for Wallengren’s genus). Conformably to the Article 60 of the Code, which concerns the replacement of junior homonyms, Diazoma Dürkoop, 1970 must be rejected and replaced by a valid synonym in this case, namely Kelusia Mamedov, 1978.
551Current name. Kelusia pentameroides (Stainier, 1887).
552Cyrtina rigauxi Maillieux, 1909d
553(Fig. 15Q-U)
5541909d Cyrtina Rigauxi Maillieux: 10-11, figs a-c.
555p 1912 Cyrtyna [sic] Rigauxi; Maillieux: 41 (to be added to Mottequin, 2005b).
556non 1970 Echinocoelia rigauxi (Maillieux, E., 1910); Vandercammen & Vandercammen-Goffinet: 53-54 (= Dionacoelia secessus Mottequin, 2005b) (to be added to Mottequin, 2005b).
5572005b Acutatheca rigauxi (Maillieux, 1909); Mottequin: 56-58, figs 3, 4, 9, table 1 (see this author for a more complete synonymy).
5582008c Acutatheca rigauxi (Maillieux, 1909); Mottequin: 502-503, fig. 61.
559Type material. The articulated specimen RBINS a9575 (Fig. 15Q-U) illustrated by line drawings in Maillieux (1909d, figs a-c) was selected as the lectotype by Mottequin (2005b, fig. 3.1-6).
560Type locality and horizon. Couvin M44 (6158B), Neuville Formation (late Frasnian).
561Description. See Maillieux (1909d) and Mottequin (2005b).
562Remarks. Cyrtina rigauxi was transferred to the genus Acutatheca Stainbrook, 1945 by Mottequin (2005b), who demonstrated that this species was confused with Dionacoelia secessus Mottequin, 2005b soon after its original description. This catalogue is an opportunity to re-illustrate the holotype of D. secessus (RBINS a12111; Fig. 16A-F), which was incorrectly figured in Mottequin (2005b, fig. 5.1-5) due to an incomprehensible error that took place during the printing process of the volume no. 75 of the Bulletin des Sciences naturelles de Belgique (Sciences de la Terre).
563Current name. Acutatheca rigauxi (Maillieux, 1909d).
Figure 16. A-F. Dionacoelia secessus Mottequin, 2005b, RBINS a12111 (holotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views and close-up of the ventral umbo showing the slightly divergent dental plates; Boussu-en-Fagne, Moulin Liénaux Formation (Ermitage Member). G-Q. Cyrtina undosa var. brachyptera Maillieux, 1914 [Cyrtinopsis brachyptera brachyptera (Maillieux, 1914)]. G-L. RBINS a10295 (lectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views, and close-up (SEM) of the poorly preserved microornament on the right ventral flank (H); Couvin 3, Jemelle Formation. M-Q. RBINS a10294 (paralectotype), incomplete articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views; Couvin 11, Jemelle Formation. R-V. Cyrtinopsis brachyptera maillieuxi Struve, 1965 (?), RBINS a10293, slightly crushed articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views; Couvin 11, Jemelle Formation. W-Y. Cyrtinopsis crenata (Steininger, 1853) (?), RBINS a10292, crushed articulated specimen in ventral and dorsal views and close-up (SEM) of the microornamentation in the sulcus. Scale bars: 5 mm (A-E, F), 10 mm (G, I-X), 1 mm (H, Y).
564Cyrtina undosa var. brachyptera Maillieux, 1914
565(Fig. 16G-Q)
566p 1912 Spirifer undosa; Maillieux: 53.
5671914 Cyrtina undosa Schnur sp. var. brachyptera Maillieux: 4-6, figs 3a-b, 4a-b.
5681927 Cyrtina undosa var. brachyptera Maillieux; Maillieux in Asselberghs & Maillieux: 148.
5691927 Cyrtina undosa var. brachyptera Maillieux; Van Tuijn: 162, 203, 258.
5701938 Cyrtinopsis undosa brachyptera (Maillieux); Maillieux: 23.
5711941d Cyrtinopsis brachyptera (Maillieux); Maillieux: 6.
5721957b Cyrtinopsis brachyptera (Maillieux); Boucot: 40, 42.
573p 1963 Cyrtinopsis undosa (J. Schnur, 1851); Vandercammen: 101-104, 149, 152-153, pl. 10, figs 3-5, 6-8 (see remarks below).
5741965 Cyrtinopsis brachyptera brachyptera (Maillieux, 1914); Struve: 14-16.
5751970 Cyrtinopsis undosa var. brachyptera (Maillieux, E., 1914); Vandercammen & Vandercammen-Goffinet: 69, 74.
576p 1970 Cyrtinopsis undosa; Bultynck: 42, 43, pls 36-37.
5771971 Cyrtinopsis brachyptera (Maillieux, 1914); Krans: 99.
578p 1971 Cyrtinopsis undosa (Schnur, 1851); Krans: figs 2, 5.
579Type material. Maillieux (1914) failed to designate a holotype for his new variety. The articulated specimen RBINS a10295 (Fig. 16G-L), illustrated by Maillieux (1914, fig. 4a-b), Vandercammen (1963, pl. 10, figs 3-5), and Krans (1971, figs 2, 5), was designated by Vandercammen (1963, in the legend of pl. 10, figs 3-5) as the holotype of Maillieux’s variety (see below) whereas the incomplete specimen RBINS a10294 (Fig. 16M-Q) figured by Maillieux (1914, fig. 3a-b) was referenced as the paratype by Vandercammen (1963, in the legend of pl. 10, figs 6-8). According to the Article 74.5 of the Code, the misuse of the term ‘holotype’ by Vandercammen (1963) acts however as lectotype designation as this author explicitly indicated, when wrongly using the term ‘holotype’, that he was selecting from the type series the specimen RBINS a10295 to serve as the name-bearing type (see also Struve, 1965); the specimen RBINS a10294 is thus a paralectotype.
580Type locality and horizon. Couvin 3, Jemelle Formation (Eifelian).
581Description. See Maillieux (1914), Vandercammen (1963, partim), and Struve (1965).
582Remarks. Conformably to the Article 45.6.4 of the Code, the variety brachyptera erected by Maillieux (1914) has a subspecific rank, but was subsequently promoted to a specific level by Maillieux (1941d). Struve (1965) split it into several subspecies. According to Struve (1965), the species is known from Belgium, Germany and North Africa.
583Two poorly preserved specimens (RBINS a10292-10293) previously identified as Cyrtinopsis undosa (Schnur, 1851) by Maillieux (1914) and Vandercammen (1963) are refigured here, pending a thorough revision of the Belgian representatives of the genus Cyrtinopsis Scupin, 1896. Struve (1965) doubtfully included the specimen RBINS a10293 (Maillieux, 1914, fig. 2a-b; Vandercammen, 1963, pl. 10, figs 9-10; Krans, 1971, fig. 3; Fig. 16R-V) in the synonymy of his new subspecies Cyrtinopsis brachyptera maillieuxi whereas the specimen RBINS a10292 (Maillieux, 1914, fig. 1; Vandercammen, 1963, text-fig. 63, pl. 10, figs 1-2; Krans, 1971, figs 1, 4; Fig. 16W-Y) was tentatively included in the synonymy of Cyrtinopsis crenata (Steininger, 1853) by Struve (1965). Struve’s opinion was not followed by Krans (1971), who placed all the specimens illustrated by Maillieux (1914) and Vandercammen (1963) in C. undosa whereas he recognized the species brachyptera in the introduction of his paper (see the synonymy list above)!
584Current name. Cyrtinopsis brachyptera brachyptera (Maillieux, 1914).
585Spirifer verneuili var. ambosulcata Maillieux, 1930
586(Fig. 17A-E)
5871930 Spirifer Verneuili var. ambosulcata Maillieux: 106-108, pl. 3, fig. 2a-b.
5881939 Spirifer (Cyrtospirifer) Verneuili ambosulcatus Maillieux; Maillieux: 4-5.
5891941d Cyrtospirifer ambosulcatus (Maillieux); Maillieux: 4.
590? 1942 Spirifer (Cyrtospirifer) verneuili Murchison var. ambosulcata Maillieux; Paeckelmann: 121-123, text-fig. 58, pl. 4, fig. 6.
5911959b Spirifer verneuili var. ambosulcata Maillieux, E., 1929 [sic]; Vandercammen: 127.
5921970 Spirifer verneuili var. ambosulcata Maillieux, E., 1930; Vandercammen & Vandercammen-Goffinet: 72, 78.
593Type material. Maillieux (1930, pl. 3, fig. 2a-b) selected the specimen RBINS a10299 (Fig. 17A-E) as the type of his variety. Conformably to the Article 73.1.1 of the Code, it is the holotype of Maillieux’s variety.
594Type locality and horizon. Durbuy 8319a, Barvaux Formation (late Frasnian).
595Description. See Maillieux (1939).
596Remarks. Maillieux’s variety has nothing in common with Cyrtospirifer verneuili (Murchison, 1840) in terms of outline, profile of the ventral interarea, etc. (see Brice, 1988). It was promoted to the specific level by Maillieux (1941d), an opinion not followed by Paeckelmann (1942), who still considered it as a variety of C. verneuili, whereas Vandercammen (1959b) regarded it as a synonym of C. grabaui (Paeckelmann, 1942). Nevertheless, it is more probable that the reverse is true as Maillieux’s species has the priority, but the revision of the cyrtospiriferids from the Barvaux Formation, which were first studied by Gosselet (1894), is needed to take a decision.
597Current name. Cyrtospirifer ambosulcatus (Maillieux, 1930).
Figure 17. A-E. Spirifer verneuili var. ambosulcata Maillieux, 1930 [Cyrtospirifer ambosulcatus (Maillieux, 1930)], RBINS a10299 (holotype), slightly deformed articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views; Durbuy 8319a, Barvaux Formation. F-I. Spirifer (Hysterolites) virvanus Maillieux, 1938 [‘Spirifer’ virvanus Maillieux, 1938], RBINS a1122 (holotype), incomplete and slightly deformed ventral valve in plan, lateral, posterior and anterior views; Treignes 8370a, Saint-Joseph Formation. J-K. Trigeria barroisi Asselberghs, 1930 [Mutationella barroisi (Asselberghs, 1930)], RBINS a3250, external mould of a ventral valve and putty cast (SEM); Malmedy 12 (Gdoumont), Marteau Formation (Waimes Member). L-S. Bathyrhyncha sp. indet., Malmedy 12 (Gdoumont), Marteau Formation (Waimes Member). L-N. RBINS a3249, articulated internal mould (with ventral valve partly included in matrix) in dorsal, lateral and posterior views (SEM). O-S. RBINS a3251, distorted and articulated internal mould in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views (SEM). Scale bars: 10 mm (A-I), 2 mm (J-N, O-S).
598Spirifer (Hysterolites) virvanus Maillieux, 1938
599(Fig. 17F-I)
6001938 Spirifer (Hysterolites) virvanus Maillieux: 12, 40, pl. 1, fig. 8, 8a-b.
6011941d Hysterolites (Hysterolites) virvanus Maillieux; Maillieux: 3.
6021970 Hysterolites virvanus (Maillieux, E., 1938); Vandercammen & Vandercammen-Goffinet: 72, 75.
603Type material. Maillieux (1938, p. 40, pl. 1, fig. 8, 8a-b) selected an incomplete ventral valve (RBINS a1122; Fig. 17F-I) as the holotype. He also mentioned a second valve from the locality Treignes 3 (Eau Noire Formation), which has not been traced in the RBINS collections.
604Type locality and horizon. Treignes 8370a, Saint-Joseph Formation (late Emsian).
605Description. See Maillieux (1938).
606Remarks. Our knowledge of Maillieux’s species is based on a single ventral valve of which the slightly divergent dental plates can be seen in Fig. 17F, H. It is important to stress on the fact that many specimens identified as Spinella incerta (Fuchs, 1909) by Vandercammen (1963) are from the type locality of the species virvanus; thus they should be reinvestigated as they could permit to better understand the concept of the species introduced by Maillieux (1938) and to state on its validity. Note that the German species described by Fuchs (1909) from the upper Emsian Remscheid Group in Bergisches Land was renamed Spirifer incertissimus by Godefroid et al. (2002) due to a primary homonymy issue with a Carboniferous North American species, and then selected by Mittmeyer (2008) as the type species of his new genus Incertia. The material previously identified as Spinella incerta (Fuchs, 1909) in the Siegenian and lower Emsian of southern Belgium by Godefroid (in Godefroid et al., 1994) needs to be revised.
607Current name. ‘Spirifer’ virvanus Maillieux, 1938.
4.11. Order Terebratulida
608Trigeria barroisi Asselberghs, 1930
609(Fig. 17J-K)
6101912a Rhynchonella nucula Sowerby; Leriche, 30-31, pl. 1, figs 8, 9, 11, 14, 15, 10 (?), 13 (?) fide Boucot (1960).
6111929 Trigeria Barroisi Asselberghs [nomen nudum]: 758.
6121930 Trigeria Barroisi Asselberghs: 43, 63, pl. 5, figs 1 (partim), 3-4, not fig. 2 (see remarks below).
6131933 Trigeria Barroisi Asselberghs; Maillieux: 43.
6141941b Trigeria Barroisi Asselberghs; Maillieux: 13.
6151942 Trigeria Barroisi Asselberghs; Dahmer: 143-145, text-figs 35-38.
6161943a Trigeria barroisi Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 10.
6171943b Trigeria barroisi Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 3, 4, 7, 12.
6181946 Trigeria Barroisi Asselberghs; Asselberghs: 328.
6191960 Mutationella barroisi (Asselberghs, 1930); Boucot: 318-320, pl. 18, figs 1-8, tables 2, 3.
6201982 Mutationella barroisi (Asselberghs, E., 1930); Godefroid: 126, table 3.
6211986 Mutationella barroisi (Asselberghs, 1930); Rachebœuf: 137-139, text-fig. 27, pl. 21, figs 9-15.
6221994 Mutationella barroisi (Asselberghs, 1930); Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 19, fig. 13.
6231999 Mutationella barroisi; Godefroid & Cravatte: 13, table 1.
624Type material. Dahmer (1942) selected the lectotype (RBINS a3248C) among the three ventral internal moulds (lectotype and two paralectotypes (RBINS a3248A, B)) illustrated by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 5, figs 1a-b; the lectotype is that on the right in both pictures). The specimens RBINS a3248A and a3248B were illustrated once more by Boucot (1960, pl. 15, fig. 6), but identified as ‘Camarotoechia’ sinuosa (Fuchs, 1923). Unfortunately, the slab with these three valves has not been traced yet and Boucot (1960) did not discuss his identification although he included these two paralectotypes in his synonymy of the species barroisi. The external mould of a ventral valve (RBINS a3250; Fig. 17J-K) figured by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 5, fig. 3) is a paralectotype. The internal moulds of two articulated specimens (RBINS a3249 (Fig. 17L-N, ventral valve partly embedded in matrix), a3251 (Fig. 17O-S)) illustrated by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 5, figs 2a, b, 4), display a septalium and are assigned to an unidentified Bathyrhyncha species (juveniles?).
625Type locality and horizon. Malmedy 12 (Gdoumont), Marteau Formation, Waimes Member (earliest Gedinnian; Pridoli).
626Description. See Asselberghs (1930), Dahmer (1942), Boucot (1960), and Rachebœuf (1986).
627Remarks. Boucot (1960) transferred this species to the meganteridid genus Mutationella Kozłowski, 1929; numerous well-preserved specimens from the Artois were figured by Rachebœuf (1986). However, it is not excluded that the specimens identified as such by Boucot (1960) has nothing in common with the lectotype selected by Dahmer (1942).
628Current name. Mutationella barroisi (Asselberghs, 1930).
629Cryptonella gamedellensis Maillieux, 1938
630(Fig. 18A-B)
6311938 Cryptonella gamedellensis Maillieux: 12, 44, pl. 1, fig. 7.
6321941b Cryptonella gamedellensis Maillieux; Maillieux: 14.
633Type material. A poorly preserved ventral (?) valve (RBINS a1126; Fig. 18A-B) was selected as the holotype by Maillieux (1938, pl. 1, fig. 7).
634Type locality and horizon. Rochefort 31 (6), Eau Noire Formation (Emsian–Eifelian).
635Description. See Maillieux (1938).
636Remarks. The ornamentation, which consists of regular, conspicuously spaced growth lamellae on which several growth lines are developed, resembles that of the genus Zonathyris Struve, 1992 (see Alvarez et al., 1996). The assignment to an athyridide or a terebratulide (no trace of endopunctation visible) genus has to be confirmed on the basis of new samples from the type locality.
637Current name. ‘Cryptonella’ gamedellensis Maillieux, 1938.
Figure 18. Cryptonella gamedellensis Maillieux, 1938 [‘Cryptonella’ gamedellensis Maillieux, 1938], RBINS a1126 (holotype), crushed, incomplete ventral (?) valve in plan and lateral oblique views; Rochefort 31 (6), Eau Noire Formation. Scale bar: 5 mm.
638Terebratula loxogonia Béclard, 1891
639(Fig. 19A-O)
6401891 Terebratula loxogonia Béclard: 98-99, 100, pl. 3, figs 3-5.
6411913 Dielasma loxogonia; Maillieux: 10, 14.
6421922a D. [Dielasma] loxogonia; Maillieux: 14.
6431929 Dielasma loxogonia; Maillieux & Demanet: table 2.
6441933 Dielasma loxogonia; Maillieux: 66.
6451938 Cryptonella loxogonia (Béclard); Maillieux: 12.
6461941b Cryptonella loxogonia (Béclard); Maillieux: 14.
6471965 ‘Terebratula’ loxogonia Béclard 1891; Godefroid: pl. (unnumbered), fig. 6.
6481968 ‘Terebratula’ loxogonia Béclard 1891; Godefroid: cited many times, pls 4-5, 8-9.
6491970 ‘Terebratula’ loxogonia; Bultynck: cited many times, pls 36-37.
6501971 ‘Terebratula’ loxogonia; Tsien: 123.
6511979 Cimicinella loxogonia (Béclard, 1891); García-Alcalde in Arbizu et al.: 108, 110, 111, 113, text-fig. 4, pl. 2, figs 11-13.
6521982 Cimicinella loxogonia; Bultynck et al.: 32, text-fig. 1.
6531983 Cimicinella loxogonia; Rzhonsnitskaya: 11, table 1.
6541994 Cimicinella loxogonia (Béclard, 1891); Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 19, fig. 13.
6551999 Cimicinella loxogonia (Béclard, 1891); García-Alcalde: 173-175, figs 11, 15, 16, table 4.
6562001 Cimicinella loxogonia; García-Alcalde: 124, fig. 2.
6572013 Cimicinella loxogonia (Béclard, 1891); García-Alcalde: 163, figs 1-2, 108, 110.5-8 (see this author for a more complete synonymy of the Spanish specimens).
658Type material. García-Alcalde (1999, fig. 16.1-4) selected the articulated specimen RBINS a1693 (Béclard, 1891, pl. 3, fig. 5, 5a-b; Godefroid, 1965, pl. (unnumbered), fig. 6; Fig. 19A-E) as the lectotype. The two other specimens illustrated by Béclard (1891, pl. 3, figs 3, 3a-b, 4, 4a-4b), namely RBINS a1691 (Fig. 19K-O) and a1692 (Fig. 19F-J), were designated as the paralectotypes by García-Alcalde (1999, fig. 16.5-12).
659Type locality and horizon. Rochefort 8679 (2), upper part of the Saint-Joseph Formation or lower part of the Eau Noire Formation (late Emsian) (García-Alcalde, 1999).
660Description. See Béclard (1891) and García-Alcalde (1999).
661Remarks. Béclard’s (1891) species was assigned to Cimicinella Schmidt, 1946 by García-Alcalde in Arbizu et al. (1979) who considered the type species of Cimicinella, namely Terebratula cimex Richter & Richter, 1918 (see Schmidt, 1946; Struve & Werner, 1964), as a synonym of C. loxogonia. Note that the internal morphology of the Belgian specimens still remains unknown whereas the stratigraphic range of the species in the Dinant Synclinorium was detailed notably by Godefroid (1968) and Bultynck et al. (1982).
662Current name. Cimicinella loxogonia (Béclard, 1891).
Figure 19. A-O. Terebratula loxogonia Béclard, 1891 [Cimicinella loxogonia (Béclard, 1891)]; Rochefort 8679 (2), upper part of the Saint-Joseph Formation or lower part of the Eau Noire Formation. A-E. RBINS a1693 (lectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. F-J. RBINS a1692 (paralectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. K-O. RBINS a1691 (paralectotype), articulated specimen in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views. P-AA. Dielasma maillieuxi Asselberghs, 1923 [Cimicinella? maillieuxi (Asselberghs, 1923)]; Bioul (Godinne, flanks of the Godinne anticline), Rivière Formation. P-W. RBINS a3159 (lectotype), articulated internal mould in ventral, dorsal, lateral, posterior and anterior views, and close-up (SEM) of the ventral muscle field and the posterior margin (with ventral valve on top). X. RBINS a3157 (paralectotype), internal mould of a ventral valve. Y. RBINS a3158 (paralectotype), internal mould of a ventral valve. Z-AA. RBINS a3160 (paralectotype), internal and external moulds of a ventral valve. All scale bars are 5 mm except U-W (2.5 mm).
663Dielasma maillieuxi Asselberghs, 1923
664(Fig. 19P-AA)
6651922 Dielasma Maillieuxi Asselberghs [nomen nudum]: B133.
6661923 Dielasma Maillieuxi Asselberghs: 26-27, pl. 1, figs 11-15.
6671933 Cryptonella Maillieuxi; Maillieux: 67.
6681938 Cryptonella Maillieuxi (Asselberghs); Maillieux: 12.
6691941b Cryptonella maillieuxi (Asselberghs); Maillieux: 14.
6701951 Dielasma whidbornei (Davidson); Asselberghs: 350, 352, 353.
6711955 Dielasma whidbornei (Davidson); Asselberghs: 199, 208, 210.
6721977 Cimicinella maillieuxi (E. Asselberghs, 1923); Bultynck & Boonen: 491.
673Type material. Asselberghs (1923, legend of pl. 1, figs 11-15) considered the figured specimens as the types but did not select a lectotype. The articulated specimen RBINS a3159 (Asselberghs, 1923, pl. 1, fig. 14a-b; Fig. 19P-W) is hereby designated as the lectotype. The specimens RBINS a3157 (Fig. 19X), a3158 (Fig. 19Y) and a3160 (Fig. 19Z-AA), which were figured by Asselberghs (1923, pl. 1, figs 12, 13, 15a-b), are paralectotypes as is also the case of the articulated internal mould (Asselberghs, 1923, pl. 1, figs 11a-b) that has not been traced so far among the collections of either the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, or the Université catholique de Louvain.
674Type locality and horizon. Bioul (Godinne, flanks of the Godinne anticline), Rivière Formation (Eifelian).
675Description. See Asselberghs (1923).
676Remarks. Asselberghs (1955) regarded his species Dielasma maillieuxi as a synonym of Waldheimia whidbornei Davidson, 1882 (see Cloud, 1942) from the Middle Devonian of the Torquay area (England), as he did implicitly in 1951, whereas Bultynck & Boonen (1977) assigned the species maillieuxi to Cimicinella Schmidt, 1946, but it needs to be confirmed.
677Current name. Cimicinella? maillieuxi (Asselberghs, 1923).
678Cryptonella mediocostata Maillieux, 1932
679(Fig. 20A-C)
6801932 Cryptonella mediocostata Maillieux: 12, 39, pl. 2, fig. 5, 5a (cited as Cryptonella medioplicata in the plate).
6811933 Cryptonella mediocostata; Maillieux: 59.
6821941a Cryptonella mediocostata Maillieux; Maillieux: 64.
6831941b Cryptonella mediocostata Maillieux; Maillieux: 14.
6841942 Cryptonella mediocostata Maillieux, 1932; Cloud: 129.
6851946 Cryptonella mediocostata Maillieux; Asselberghs: 248, 330.
6861994 Cryptonella mediocostata Maillieux, 1932; Godefroid in Godefroid et al.: 19, fig. 13.
687Type material. The internal mould of a ventral valve (RBINS a963; Fig. 20A-C) was selected as the holotype by Maillieux (1932, pl. 2, fig. 5, 5a); it is the only known specimen of this species.
688Type locality and horizon. Vireux-Molhain 2 (France), base of the Hierges Formation according to Godefroid & Stainier (1988) (late Emsian).
689Description. See Maillieux (1932).
690Remarks. Contrary to what Maillieux (1932) stated, internal features can be observed easily. Long, slender dental plates circumscribe an unexcavated muscle field. The presence of low ribs near the anterior margin of sulcus is at the origin of the specific name, but additional material is required in order to revise this very poorly known species.
691Current name. ‘Cryptonella’ mediocostata Maillieux, 1932.
Figure 20. A-C. Cryptonella mediocostata Maillieux, 1932 [‘Cryptonella’ mediocostata Maillieux, 1932], RBINS a963 (holotype), incomplete mould of a ventral valve in plan, oblique lateral and anterior views; Vireux-Molhain 2, Hierges Formation. D-S. Dielasma pruvosti Asselberghs, 1930 [‘Dielasma’ pruvosti Asselberghs, 1930], syntypes illustrated by Asselberghs (1930); Florenville 1 (Muno), Mondrepuis Formation. D-I. RBINS 3227, ventral external mould in plan and anteroventral views, and ventral internal mould in plan, lateral, posterior and anterior views. J-M. RBINS a3228, dorsal internal mould in dorsal, lateral, posterior and posterodorsal views. N-S. RBINS 582 (this specimen was referred to Protathyris? straeleni by Boucot (1960)), internal mould of a dorsal valve in plan, lateral, oblique lateral, posterior, posterodorsal and anterior views. T-Y. Cryptonella rugosa Maillieux, 1931 [Monsenella? minor (Dahmer, 1931)], RBINS a927 (holotype), incomplete internal mould of a dorsal valve in plan, lateral, oblique lateral, posterior and anterior views, and putty cast of dorsal exterior; Harzé 4a, Solières Formation. All scale bars are 5 mm.
692Dielasma pruvosti Asselberghs, 1930
693(Fig. 20D-S)
6941929 Dielasma Pruvosti Asselberghs [nomen nudum]: 758.
6951930 Dielasma Pruvosti Asselberghs: 35, 62, pl. 4, figs 1-3 (see remarks below).
6961933 Cryptonella pruvosti; Maillieux: 43.
6971941b Cryptonella pruvosti (Asselberghs); Maillieux: 14.
6981943b Cryptonella pruvosti (Asselberghs); Asselberghs: 4, 12.
6991946 Cryptonella pruvosti (Asselberghs); Asselberghs: 328.
700Type material. The illustrated syntypes include the internal mould of a ventral valve (with external mould) (RBINS a3327; Fig. 20D-I) figured by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 4, fig. 1a-b) and an internal mould of a dorsal valve (RBINS a3228; Fig. 20J-M) illustrated by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 4, fig. 2) as well as a second dorsal internal mould (RBINS a582; Fig. 20N-S), which was figured by Asselberghs (1930, pl. 4, fig. 3) and re-illustrated by Boucot (1960, pl. 18, fig. 15), who assigned it to Protathyris? straeleni (Asselberghs, 1930).
701Type locality and horizon. Florenville 1 (Muno), Mondrepuis Formation (early Gedinnian; Lochkovian).
702Description. See Asselberghs (1930).
703Remarks. Asselberghs’ species was overlooked by Boucot (1960) and subsequent workers, most probably due to the poor state of preservation of the type material. However, it is not excluded that Asselberghs’ (1930) species Dielasma pruvosti and Protathyris? straeleni are synonymous. The morphology (e.g. faint sulcus anteriorly developed, regular ornamentation, short and thin dental plates) of the ventral internal mould RBINS a3327 may suggest an assignment to Protathyris, but further material is required to reach a more confident opinion. Nevertheless, according to Principle of Priority (Article 23.1 of the Code), if the synonymy between both species is confirmed, the species pruvosti must be considered as the first described by Asselberghs (1930, page 35 vs. page 42 for straeleni). It is more cautious at this stage, pending the revision of the species pruvosti and straeleni on the basis of further and maybe better preserved material, to opt for the status quo and to not select the lectotypes of both species now.
704Current name. ‘Dielasma’ pruvosti Asselberghs, 1930.
705Cryptonella rugosa Maillieux, 1931
706(Fig. 20T-Y)
7071931 Cryptonella rugosa Maillieux: 7, 27-28, 86, pl. 1, fig. 12, 12a.
7081936a Cryptonella rugosa Maillieux; Maillieux: 113-114.
7091942 Cryptonella rugosa Maillieux, 1931; Cloud: 130.
710Type material. The incomplete internal mould of a dorsal valve (with external mould) (RBINS a927; Fig. 20T-Y) was selected by Maillieux (1931, pl. 1, fig. 12, 12a) as the holotype.
711Type locality and horizon. Harzé 4a, Solières Formation (Siegenian; Pragian).
712Description. See Maillieux (1931).
713Remarks. According to Maillieux (1936a), Cryptonella rugosa is synonymous with C. rhenana mut. minor Dahmer, 1931 and he reported the latter species as abundant in several Siegenian lithostratigraphic units of southern Belgium. Cloud (1942) rejected Maillieux’s species from the genus Cryptonella Hall, 1861 and, more recently, García-Alcalde (2013) doubtfully referred Dahmer’s species to his new cryptonellid genus Monsenella.
714Current name. Monsenella? minor (Dahmer, 1931).
5. Further comments on Silurian (Pridoli)–Devonian brachiopods firstly described in Belgium (1850-1950)
715Although the type material of the bulk of the Silurian and Devonian brachiopod species originally described in Belgium is curated now at the RBINS, that of a significant number of species is deposited in other institutions. In this chapter, we focus on those of which the type material is housed in Belgian universities (synonymy lists are provided only for the species illustrated herein); the others, which were described by de Koninck (1855), Gosselet (1877, 1887), and Fuchs (1914, 1923) are curated in foreign institutions and only listed (Table 1) in order to browse the most complete list as possible of brachiopod species. The Belgian material curated in foreign institutions and used by Grabau (1931-1933) and Paeckelmann (1942) for the erection of new varieties and species is not discussed herein.
Species |
Order |
Age |
Revision |
Type |
Tenuisinurostrum crenulatum (Gosselet, 1877) |
R |
Fa |
Sartenaer (1967) |
Lectotype (MGL) |
Ptychomaletoechia dumonti (Gosselet, 1877) |
R |
Fa |
Sartenaer (1969) |
NS (MGL) |
‘Lingula’ gedinniana Fuchs, 1914 |
L |
Ge |
Nil |
NS (MB.B.) |
Ptychomaletoechia gonthieri (Gosselet, 1887) |
R |
Fa |
Sartenaer (1969) |
NS (MGL) |
Spirifer (Quadrifarius) loculatus Fuchs, 1923 |
S |
Ge |
Fuchs (1929), Dahmer (1942, 1951) |
NS (MB.B.) |
Pampoecilorhynchus nux (Gosselet, 1887) |
R |
Fa |
Sartenaer (1958) |
Lectotype (MGL) |
Ptychomaletoechia omaliusi (Gosselet, 1877) |
R |
Fa |
Sartenaer (1961) |
Lectotype (MGL) |
‘Rhynchonella’ palmata Gosselet, 1887 |
R |
Fa |
Nil |
NS (MGL) |
Floweria pseudoelegans (Gosselet, 1877) |
O |
Fa |
Mottequin (2008a) |
NS (MGL) |
Crinisarina reticulata (Gosselet, 1877) |
A |
Fa |
Mottequin (2008a) |
Lectotype (MGL) |
Bathyrhyncha sinuosa Fuchs, 1923 |
R |
Ge |
Dahmer (1942) |
Lectotype (MB.B.) |
Eoparaphorhynchus triaequalis (Gosselet, 1877) |
R |
Fa |
Sartenaer (1957) |
Lectotype (MGL) |
Rugodavidsonia woodwardiana (de Koninck, 1855) |
At |
Ei–Gi |
Copper (1996) |
Neotype (HMCZ) |
Table 1. Brachiopod species first described in Belgium but of which the type specimen (selected or not (NS)) is deposited in France (MGL: Musée Gosselet (Musée d’Histoire naturelle), Lille), Germany (MB.B.: Museum für Naturkunde (Leibniz-Institut) der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin), and the USA (HMCZ: Harvard Museum of Comparative Zoology, Cambridge, Massachusetts). Abbreviations for the brachiopod orders: A, Athyridida; At, Atrypida; L, Lingulida; O, Orthotetida; R, Rhynchonellida; S, Spiriferida. Abbreviations for the ages: Ei, Eifelian; Fa, Famennian; Ge, ‘Gedinnian’; Gi, Givetian.
5.1. Order Lingulida
716Lingula amayana de Ryckholt, 1854
717(Fig. 21A-C)
7181854 Lingula Amayana de Ryckholt: 169-170, pl. 18, figs 10-11.
7191868 Lingula Amayana de Ryckh.; Dewalque: 318.
7201878 Lingula Amayana Ryckholt; Bigsby: 37.
7211880 Lingula Amayana de Ryckh.; Dewalque: 358.
7221881 Lingula Amayana de Ryckh.; Mourlon: 19.
723? 1909a Lingula Amayana de Ryckh.; Maillieux: 138.
724Type material. A partly exfoliated fragment of an indeterminate valve (ULg.PA.2018.12.23/2; Fig. 21A-C), identified as such on a green label typical of de Ryckholt’s collection, has been recovered so far. It is hereby designated as the lectotype.
725Type locality and horizon. Amay (with no other indication), Upper Devonian (Frasnian or Famennian).
726Description. See de Ryckholt (1854).
727Remarks. Maillieux (1909a) reported the presence of this species in the Frasnian of the Dinant Synclinorium, but after this report, de Ryckholt’s species was not cited anymore in the Belgian literature to our knowledge. The available material does not permit to reach a better generic identification.
728Current name. ‘Lingula’ amayana de Ryckholt, 1854.
Figure 21. A-C. Lingula amayana de Ryckholt, 1854 [‘Lingula’ amayana de Ryckholt, 1854], ULg.PA.2018.12.23/2 (lectotype), incomplete undifferentiated valve (arrow) associated to a bivalve and a smooth rhynchonellide brachiopod (A), detail of the poorly preserved filae (B), and close-up (C); Amay, Upper Devonian shales (precise level unknown). D-F. Crania corneti Dewalque, 1881 [Petrocrania? corneti (Dewalque, 1881)], ULg.PA.2018.12.23/2 (lectotype), ventral valve (internal view) fixed on an incomplete dorsal valve of an atrypide brachiopod (Desquamatia (Neatrypa) sp.); Huccorgne, Bovesse Formation. Scale bars: A (5 mm), B (0.1 mm), C (1 mm), and D-F (10 mm).
729Orbiculoidea namona de Ryckholt, 1851
7301851 Orbiculoïdea Namona de Ryckholt: 174, pl. 10, figs 13-15.
731Type material. Not traced, but the Devonian material of de Ryckholt should be present in the collections of the University of Liège as it was bought by Dewalque (Dewalque, 1879; Denayer et al., 2014).
732Type locality and horizon. De Ryckholt (1851) only indicated that the species is from the Devonian, but no locality is provided. According to Dewalque (1868), it is from the Famennian in all likelihood, but as explained in his Prodrome d’une description géologique de la Belgique, the Frasnian rocks were considered as belonging to the ‘Famennian System’ at that time. Nevertheless, Dewalque’s assertion cannot be confirmed and an older Devonian age is not excluded.
733Description. Nil.
734Remarks. This species is only known by de Ryckholt’s (1851) drawings, which correspond to the ventral, dorsal, and lateral (one valve!) views of one or several specimens of which the ornamentation consists of numerous filae. Although de Ryckholt (1851) did not describe his new species, it is valid conformably to the Article 12.2.7 of the Code. This species is temporarily assigned to Orbiculoidea regarding the position of the apexes and the convexity of both valves.
735Current name. Orbiculoidea? namona de Ryckholt, 1851.
736Lingula racheneuri Leriche, 1948
7371948 Lingula Racheneuri Leriche: 293-294, pl. 1, fig. 8.
738Type material. Only one of the two specimens (Mons University collections) reported by Leriche (1948) was illustrated originally. It could be selected as the lectotype.
739Type locality and horizon. Wihéries, Bois d’Ausse Formation (Siegenian; Pragian). According to the stratigraphical data available (Leriche, 1948; Blieck, 2015), the species is from the Rhinopteraspis dunensis Biozone of Pragian age.
740Description. See Leriche (1948).
741Remarks. Leriche’s (1948) material is inadequate for the erection of new species (poorly preserved specimens, internal features unknown).
742Current name. ‘Lingula’ racheneuri Leriche, 1948.
5.2. Order Craniida
743Orbiculoidea cantraineana de Ryckholt, 1851
7441851 Orbicula Cantraineana de Ryckholt: 92, 99 (a footnote on page 92 indicates ‘lisez [read] Orbiculoïdea’).
7451851 Orbiculoïdea Cantraineana de Ryckholt: 174, pl. 4, figs 1-2.
746Type material. Not traced (same remark as for the species namona above).
747Type locality and horizon. De Ryckholt (1851) only mentioned that his material was from the Devonian of the Luxembourg, but this could also mean Devonian of the Luxembourg province (south-eastern Belgium) and not the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg.
748Description. See de Ryckholt (1851)
749Remarks. De Ryckholt (1851) reported five specimens fixed on an orthoconic cephalopod; the fact that they were attached to a hard substrate by the cementation of the ventral valve suggests a possible assignment to Petrocrania or to a closely related craniide genus. The species was cited at least by the same authors than ‘Lingula’ amayana de Ryckholt, 1854 (see above), except Maillieux (1909a).
750Current name. Petrocrania? cantraineana (de Ryckholt, 1851).
751Orbiculoidea cimacensis de Ryckholt, 1851
7521851 Orbicula Cimacensis de Ryckholt: 92, 99 (a footnote on page 92 indicates ‘lisez [read] Orbiculoïdea’).
7531851 Orbiculoïdea Cimacensis de Ryckholt: 174, pl. 4, figs 3-4.
754Type material. Not traced (same remark as for the species namona above).
755Type locality and horizon. De Ryckholt (1851) reported his species in the Devonian of Chimay, as reflected by the specific epithet. According to Dewalque (1868), it is from the Famennian in all likelihood, but as explained in his Prodrome d’une description géologique de la Belgique, the Frasnian rocks were considered as belonging to the ‘Famennian System’ at that time. Nevertheless, Dewalque’s assertion cannot be confirmed and an older Devonian age cannot be ruled out.
756Description. See de Ryckholt (1851).
757Remarks. De Ryckholt’s (1851) coloured drawings clearly show the conical dorsal valve of a craniide attached to an unidentified brachiopod characterized by numerous thin ribs. He reported the presence of radial ribs that could correspond to the simulation of the ornamentation of its host. These features suggest an assignment to Petrocrania or to a related genus. This species was cited at least by Dewalque (1868, 1880), Bigsby (1878), and Mourlon (1881).
758Current name. Petrocrania? cimacensis (de Ryckholt, 1851).
759Crania corneti Dewalque, 1881
760(Fig. 21D-F)
7611875 Crania Rutoti Dewalque [nomen nudum]: 135.
7621881 Crania Corneti Dewalque: 51, pl. 3, fig. 3a-b.
7631888 Crania Corneti Dew.; Gosselet: 415.
7641936 Crania Corneti; Asselberghs: 277.
7651936 Petrocrania Corneti Dewalque; Asselberghs: 312.
766Type material. According to Dewalque (1881), the ventral valve (ULg.PA.2018.12.23/3; Fig. 21D-F) fixed on the dorsal valve of an atrypide (Desquamatia (Neatrypa) sp.) was the only specimen available for study, it is thus the holotype by monotypy.
767Type locality and horizon. Huccorgne (Dewalque 1881; Asselberghs, 1936), Bovesse Formation (early Frasnian).
768Description. See Dewalque (1881).
769Remarks. Crania corneti was previously reported as C. rutoti by Dewalque (1875) in a list of brachiopod species from the Frasnian of Huccorgne (see also Asselberghs, 1936), but the specific name Crania rutoti has to be considered as nomen nudum on the basis of the Article 12 of the Code. This species is doubtfully referred to the genus Petrocrania; the dorsal valve still remains unknown.
770Current name. Petrocrania? corneti (Dewalque, 1881).
5.3. Order Strophomenida
771Stropheodonta dorlodoti Asselberghs, 1912
7721912 Stropheodonta Dorlodoti Asselberghs: 5-6, pl. 1, figs 4-5.
773Type material. Not traced until now, but it should be part of the collections of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven or of the Université catholique de Louvain.
774Type locality and horizon. Emines, Bovesse Formation (early Frasnian).
775Description. See Asselberghs (1912).
776Remarks. This small-sized species was assigned to the genus Douvillina by Maillieux (1940a), but based on the poor Asselberghs’ pictures, it is impossible to reach a confident generic identification. This species is quite common within the Bovesse Formation according to Asselberghs (1912), who also reported it from the middle Frasnian Rhisnes Formation; Asselberghs (1936) mentioned it in both previous lithostratigraphic units and in the Franc-Waret Formation (late Frasnian).
777Current name. Douvillina? dorlodoti Asselberghs, 1912.
778Strophomenes rigida de Koninck, 1876
7791876 Strophomenes rigida de Koninck: 35-36, 48, pl. 1, figs 5, 5a.
780Type material. The line drawings of a dorsal valve of the Dewalque collection (ULg) provided by de Koninck (1876) are clearly embellished. No lectotype has been selected until now although Mottequin & Denayer (2015, fig. 1.3) illustrated a dorsal valve relatively close to de Koninck’s drawings.
781Type locality and horizon. De Koninck (1876) did not indicate the origin of his new species, but it is from Gdoumont, Marteau Formation, Waimes Member (earliest Gedinnian; Pridoli).
782Description. See Boucot (1960).
783Remarks. Boucot (1960) assigned this species to the genus Shaleria Caster, 1939 whereas Harper & Boucot (1978c) assigned it to their new subgenus S. (Protoshaleria), but the latter is considered as a synonym of the nominal subgenus by Cocks & Rong (2000). De Koninck’s species was recently illustrated and discussed by Jahnke (1986), Godefroid & Cravatte (1999) and Jansen (2014).
784Current name. Shaleria (Shaleria) rigida (de Koninck, 1876).
5.4. Order Productida/Suborder Chonetidina
785Chonetes omaliana de Koninck, 1876
7861876 Chonetes Omaliana de Koninck: 34-35, 48, pl. 1, fig. 4.
787Type material. Dahmer (1942) selected the ventral valve (Dewalque’s collection, ULg) figured by de Koninck (1876, pl. 1, fig. 4) as the type (= lectotype, not traced).
788Type locality and horizon. Gdoumont, Marteau Formation, Waimes Member (earliest Gedinnian; Pridoli).
789Description. See Boucot (1960).
790Remarks. The generic assignment of this abundant but still imperfectly known species needs to be revised (Rachebœuf, 1995).
791Current name. ‘Chonetes’ omaliana de Koninck, 1876.
5.5. Orthotetida
792Orthotetes consimilis de Koninck, 1882
7931882 Orthotetes consimilis de Koninck: 523-525, fig. 3.
794Type material. The ventral valve illustrated by de Koninck (1882) has not been traced yet.
795Type locality and horizon. No locality is cited by de Koninck (1882), who only mentioned that his new species is found everywhere in the middle Famennian (i.e. Souverain-Pré Formation), but scarcer in the upper Famennian (see Mourlon, 1882).
796Description. See de Koninck (1882).
797Remarks. This poorly known, although abundant (e.g. Mourlon, 1882) orthotetide needs to be investigated according to Mottequin (2008a) and Mottequin & Brice (2019).
798Current name. ‘Orthotetes’ consimilis de Koninck, 1882.
5.6. Orthida
799Orthis subvulvaria Asselberghs, 1913b
8001913b Orthis subvulvaria Asselberghs: 89-93, pl. 3, figs 1-5.
801Type material. Five ventral internal moulds were illustrated by Asselberghs (1913b), but no lectotype has been selected until now.
802Type locality and horizon. Longlier, Villé Formation (Siegenian; Pragian).
803Description. See Asselberghs (1913b).
804Remarks. This species is a primary homonym of Orthis subvulvaria Maurer, 1886 (see Maillieux 1936a). Maurer’s (1886) name was proposed for two internal moulds figured and identified as ‘Orthis hipparionyx? Vanuxem and J. Hall’ by Davidson (1865, pl. 17, figs 9, 12) from Cornwall (UK). They were later referred to Proschizophoria personata (Zeiler, 1857) notably by Drevermann (1904) and Boucot et al. (1966) whereas the species erected by Asselberghs (1913b) was assigned doubtfully to Protocortezorthis Johnson & Talent, 1967 by Walmsley & Boucot (1975).
805Current name. Protocortezorthis? subvulvaria (Asselberghs, 1913b).
806Orthis verneuili de Koninck, 1876
8071876 Orthis verneuili de Koninck: 36-38, 48, pl. 1, fig. 6.
808Type material. No lectotype has been selected until now and de Koninck (1876) did not precise to which collection belong the illustrated specimens. However, de Koninck (1876, p. 26, footnote no. 2) clearly indicated that the material from Mondrepuis (France) was collected by G. Dewalque (collections of the University of Liège) and C. Malaise (not yet traced in the RBINS collections). Ventral and dorsal internal moulds from the former collection were illustrated by Mottequin & Denayer (2015, figs 5-6).
809Type locality and horizon. Mondrepuis, Mondrepuis Formation (early Gedinnian; Lochkovian).
810Description. See Boucot (1960) and Harper et al. (1969).
811Remarks. This small orthide was assigned to Platyorthis Schuchert & Cooper, 1931 by Boucot (1960) and re-illustrated by Godefroid & Cravatte (1999).
812Current name. Platyorthis verneuili (de Koninck, 1876).
5.7. Order Rhynchonellida
813Rhynchonella aequicostata de Koninck, 1876
8141876 Rhynchonella æquicostata de Koninck: 38-39, 48, pl. 1, fig. 7.
815Type material. The lectotype has not been selected yet. As for Platyorthis verneuili (see above), de Koninck (1876) did not precise the collection to which both illustrated specimens belong. Mottequin & Denayer (2015, fig. 1.4) figured a specimen close to that figured by de Koninck (1876, pl. 1, fig. 7).
816Type locality and horizon. The material identified as such by de Koninck in Dewalque’s collection is from Gdoumont, Marteau Formation, Waimes Member (earliest Gedinnian; Pridoli).
817Description. See Boucot (1960).
818Remarks. This imperfectly known species (see also Dahmer (1942) and Godefroid & Cravatte (1999)) needs to be revised as is probably the case for the other rhynchonellides from the Pridoli–Lochkovian siliciclastic succession of southern Belgium. It is assigned to Bathyrhyncha.
819Current name. Bathyrhyncha aequicostata (de Koninck, 1876).
5.8. Order Spiriferida
820Spirifer aequicostatus de Koninck, 1882
8211882 Spirifer æquicostatus de Koninck: 522-523, fig. 2.
822Type material. Not traced.
823Type locality and horizon. Maurenne, Etrœungt Formation (latest Famennian).
824Description. See de Koninck (1882).
825Remarks. This species is only known by the short description of the ventral valve provided by de Koninck (1882), but it is distinct from Prospira struniana (Gosselet, 1857), which is well-known in the uppermost Famennian of southern Belgium and northern France (Mottequin & Brice, 2016), by its less transverse outline and the development of its sulcus.
826Current name. ‘Spirifer’ aequicostatus de Koninck, 1882.
827Spirifer dumontianus de Koninck, 1876
8281876 Spirifer Dumontianus de Koninck: 39-40, pl. 1, fig. 9.
829Type material. The ventral internal mould (ULg.PA.2018.12.23/4) figured by de Koninck (1876, pl. 1, fig. 9) from Dewalque’s collections, which was partly photographically illustrated by Mottequin & Denayer (2015, fig. 1.2), was selected as the type (= lectotype) by Dahmer (1942).
830Type locality and horizon. Gdoumont, Marteau Formation, Waimes Member (earliest Gedinnian; Pridoli).
831Description. See Asselberghs (1930), Boucot (1957a, 1960), and Vandercammen (1963).
832Remarks. Asselberghs (1931) discussed the relationships existing between de Koninck’s species and Spirifer (Quadrifarius) loculatus Fuchs, 1923 from Waimes, which was selected by Fuchs (1923) as the type of his new subgenus Quadrifarius (see also Fuchs, 1929): he considered that the latter species was a junior synonym of the former, an opinion followed by subsequent researchers (e.g. Dahmer, 1942; Boucot 1957a, 1960). Quadrifarius is considered as a subgenus of Delthyris Dalman, 1828 by Johnson & Hou (2006b) or as a distinct genus (e.g. Jansen, 2016). Godefroid & Cravatte (1999) and Jansen (2016) discussed the importance of this species for deciphering the Silurian-Devonian boundary.
833Current name. Delthyris (Quadrifarius) dumontianus (de Koninck, 1876).
6. Acknowledgments
834The author is very grateful to Julien Cillis (RBINS) who did the SEM photographic work, to Julien Denayer and Valentin Fischer (Université de Liège), who gave access to the collections of the Université de Liège, and to Jenaro García-Alcalde (Universidad de Oviedo) for fruitful discussions on the Devonian rhynchonellides from the Cantabrian Mountains. Martin Aberhan and Andreas Abele (Museum für Naturkunde Berlin), and Angela Ehling (Berlin Department of the Bundesanstalt für Geologie und Rohstoffe) are also thanked for having looked for specimens among Fuchs’ material curated in their respective institution. The manuscript benefited from the thorough reviews of Andrzej Baliński (Instytut Paleobiologii PAN, Warsaw) and Ulrich Jansen (Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum, Frankfurt).
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1156Manuscript received 12.01.2019, accepted in revised form 06.06.2019, available on line 19.07.2019.