Pholadomya
Pholadomya Temporal range: Early Triassic-Late Pliocene ~251–2.6 Ma | |
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Fossil specimen of Pholadomya scutata species from Jurassic deposits | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Bivalvia |
Order: | Pholadomyoida |
Family: | Pholadomyidae |
Genus: | Pholadomya G. B. Sowerby I, 1823 |
Type species | |
P. candida | |
Species | |
See text |
Pholadomya is a genus of fossil saltwater clams, marine bivalve mollusks in the family Pholadomyidae. Fossils species within this genus lived during the Mesozoic era, in the opening South Atlantic, between present-day Brazil and Africa. In the Triassic of Argentina, Austria, Hungary, and Italy fossils have been found. They are found in the Jurassic of the Coquina Group, La Guajira, Colombia among many other places. Of Campanian age, this genus is widespread as a fossil in Cameroon, France, Poland, Austria, Germany and the USA. Fossils up to the Neogene have been found in Belgium, the United Kingdom, and Venezuela (Pliocene Mare and Playa Grande Formations) and Miocene Bulgaria, Chile, Colombia, Cyprus, Germany, India, Japan, Malta, Moldova, New Zealand, Panama, Poland, the Russian Federation, Slovakia, Trinidad and Tobago, and Venezuela.[1]
Species
Species within the genus Pholadomya include:[2]
- Pholadomya candida Sowerby, 1823
- Pholadomya maoria Dell, 1963
- Pholadomya scutata
- Pholadomya tumida
- Pholadomya triquetra
- Pholadomya texta
References
External links
- WoRMS
- Encyclopaedia of Life
- GBIF
- Natalia Pereira Benaim & Maria Célia Elias Senra Gênero Pholadomya Sowerby, 1823 (Mollusca: Bivalvia) na Formação Jandaíra (Cretáceo Superior)