SILICIFIED TURBELLARIA FROM CALICO MOUNTAINS NODULES

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^os BULLETIN, SO. CALIF. ACADEMY OF SCIENCES Vol. 59, Part 3, 1960 SILICIFIED TURBELLARIA FROM CALICO MOUNTAINS NODULES W. DWIGHT jplerce Drawings by the author. The following is the fifth report of the writer's investigation of fossils from calcareous petroliferous nodules formed in a Miocene lake in the area which is now the Calico Mountains, San Bernardino County, California (See Bull. So. Calif. Acad. Sci., 57:13-24; 58:72-78; 58:79-83; and 59:40-49). The material herein discussed constitutes a first record of fossil preservation for the Class Turbellaria. Only by instantaneous death and preservation, and catalytic replacement of the tissues by colloidal silica can this material be explained. Included are six specimens of flat worms representing three species, belonging to three families; also 360 eggs of one type, and 53 eggs of another type, believed also to be Turbellarian. The material was extracted by formic acid from nodules found in six quarter sections of the southeast mountain mass of the Calico Mountains, at altitudes 2500 to 2800 ft., and was collected at 10 sites, in 12 lots, by 8 persons. The extracted specimens are now mounted in balsam on fourteen microscope slides in the collections of the Los Angeles County Museum. See Table 1 for essential data. CLASS TURBELLARIA Free-living flat worms, with cellular or syncitial epidermis; body undivided; life cycle simple. While common in fresh waters, these worms are so soft that none have ever been recorded in Paleontology. We now have three silicified types from the Miocene. ORDER RHABDOCOELA Small Turbellaria with complete digestive tract; intestine saclike, without evident diverticula. Specimen 4065 (Plate 44, Figure 1) is a very thin disc of pale yellowish color, slightly convex dorsally and concave ventrally. The eye spots are complex and near the anterior lateral margin. The mouth opening is ventral, close to the anterior third, and has two organs extending forward. The intestine is dimly outlined from mouth to penis bulb, which is elongate. The male gonopore is terminal with long canal to the antrum, into which three canals lead, the middle one probably connected to the penis bulb. There are a number of tactile hairs on the margin of the body. 138

TABLE 1. DATA ON TUBELLARIAN WORMS AND EGGS FROM NODULES Worms Objects No. Measure mm. Spec. No. Nodule No. 1/4 Sect. R1E R2E Site Lot Altitude Collector Rhabdocoela 1 0.809x0.42 4065 12825 SW18 84 171 2800 D. Weissman Tricladida Rhynchodemidae 1 3.57 x0.44 4359 2855 SW18 2D 20 2700 Dara Shilo Planariidae 1 1.59 X0.307 2721 31 SW18 2 1 2650-2800 W. D. Pierce 2 0.48 X0.0769 1179 6568 SW24 15 84 2500 Chas. Artman 1 1.00 xo.288 4316 12582 SW24 101B 167 John Carr Eggs Type 1 345 0.19 diam. 4235 3231 SW24 15 25 2500 G. Kanakoff 15 0.21 diam. 4245 16054 NE24 92 218 G. Kanakoff Type II 1 0.23 diam. 4215 3231 SW24 15 25 2500 G. Kanakoff 1 0.21 diam. 4197 10193 SW24 15 104 2500 G. Kanakoff 2 0.25-0.26 2299 21 SW18 2 1 2650-2800 Jeanne Hotchkiss 15 0.21-0.23 2966 12733 SE18 74 169 John Carr 5 0.21-0.23 2715 13608 NE19 17F 185 2700 G. Kanakoff 1 0.23 3813 4741 NE19 25 60 2725 John Carr 3 0.21 4222 27062 NE19? 319? Laura Rouse 25 0.19-0.25 2962 17505 NW19? 258? Laura Rouse It is excluded from Order Acoela, family Proporidae, in which the genus Afronta has a terminal genital opening, but no intestine. According to Ludwig von Graff (1905. Monograph of Turbellaria II Rhabdocoela. in Das Tierreich, lief. 23) all of the families with terminal genital opening fall in the suborder Lecithophora. SUBORDER LECITHOPHORA Libbie Henrietta Hyman (1951. The Invertebrates: Platyhelminthes and Rhynchocoela. The Acoelomate Bilateria. vo. II, p. 59) defines this suborder as "Rhabdocoels with bulbose pharynx, paired protonephridia, ventral gonopores, germovitellaria, or separate ovaries and yolk glands; reproduction exclusively sexual; fresh water, marine, or terrestrial, mostly free-living, some commensal or parasitic. 139

In this suborder, the families Umagillidae (Anoplodiidae), Cylindrostomidae (Genostomatidate), Byrsophlebidae, and Gyratricidae have the genital opening terminal. The first three families are parasitic, the last predaceous. It is not the function of the writer in this article to name this fine specimen, as many of the characters used in the group are too obscure for delineation. However the characters delineated by Hyman and by von Graff seem to bring this specimen into the Section Typhloplanoida. In Hyman's classification the section Typhloplanoida is composed of Lecithophora without a proboscis, pharynx usually of rosulate type, mouth ventral, back from tip; with one or two gonopores. ORDER TRICLADIDA SUBORDER TERRICOLA FAMILY RHYNCHODEMIDAE The largest Turbellarian so far found is Specimen 4359 (Plate 44, Figure 2). The intestinal canal lies diagonally, indicating a twisting of the body. The shape is elongate, stem-like. The eye spots are near the anterior lateral margin. The mouth opening is ventral at the anterior fifth of the body. A faint double line forward from the mouth indicates the division of the two forward portions of the intestines, while the posterior part lies in a diagonal position. The posterior half of the body is crystal clear. The body is constricted behind the middle. There are clusters of tactile hairs not far behind the mouth on each side, and a few other hairs behind. At posterior quarter on right side is a genital pore with a well defined covering flap; and nearer the apex on the left side is another pore with a smaller flap. SUBORDER PALUDICOLA FAMILY PLANARIIDAE Four specimens of planarians (Plate 44, Figures 1-3) have been extracted by acid from the nodules as listed in the table. These tiny flat worms have typical eye spots, rounded head, pointed apex, and the side view of one shows the mouth opening. They are speckled, but show no describable details of the internal structure. CLASS TURBELLARIA (?) In the second paper of the nodule series (Bull. So. Calif. Acad. Sci. 58:72-78) the writer recorded for the first time the 140

PLATE 44 Fig. 1. Fossil Rhabdocoele, Specimen 4065; length 0.809 mm. Fig. 2. Fossil Rhynchodemid, Specimen 4359; length 3.57 mm. Fig. 3. Two fossil Planarians, Specimen 1179; length 0.48 mm. 141

finding of fossil insect eggs. Some of these will be recorded in another paper; but in addition to insect, mite, and fairy shrimp eggs, there have appeared in the acid digestion of the nodules, two kinds of eggs which more closely resemble the Turbellarian type. Turbellaria sometimes develop the eggs and offspring within the body; while others deposit eggs singly or in strips of gelatinous material. The yolkcells are usually not stored in the egg itself, but in special cells. Among the Tricladida the eggs are surrounded by yolk cells to form a capsule. Rhabdocoele eggs are generally laid singly, each enclosed in a rounded, oval, or hemispherical albuminoid shell or capsule. In Polycladida the worm ejects a continuous adhesive gelatinous thread containing a row of eggs. The eggs of Acoela are also enclosed in a delicate capsule embedded in gelatinous material. PLATE 45 B 5 Fig. 4. Fossil eggs, Type I, in ribbon, and enlarged single egg, thought to be Turbellarian, Specimen 4235; size of single egg 0.19 mm. Fig. 5. Three fossil eggs, deposited singly, showing three phases of embryonic development, thought to be Turbellarian, Specimen 2962; size of eggs 0.19 to 0.25 mm. 142

Development is very rapid, so we may consider it very fortunate that the unusual conditions under which the Miocene nodule fossils were rapidly silicified, made possible the preservation of these delicate eggs. We will make no attempt to assign these eggs to any family, but desire to record them now and alert the specialists to the fact that fossil eggs of the Miocene age, perfectly preserved three dimensionally, exist in the Calico Mountains nodules. As may be seen from the tabulation, these eggs are tiny. The Type I eggs are spherical, black, surrounded by many gelatinous flakes and held together in long strips. The 345 contained in nodule 3231 were, for the most part in one mass of coiled strips. The actual egg proper measures 0.086 mm., but with the surrounding flakes the diameter averages 0.19 mm. These were found in two localities, two quarter sections. (Plate 45, Figure 4). The Type II eggs are spherical consisting of a central egg enclosed in a clear convex capsule of smooth outer surface, each laid singly. In Nodule 17505 there were 25 eggs in different stages of development as shown in the illustration (Plate 45, Figure 5). The tiny egg proper may measure as little as 0.057 mm., within a clear mass measuring 0.23 mm. in diameter. These eggs have been found, as shown by the tabulation, in five quarter sections, in other words through the entire lake area. 143