identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03D087AEFFA0FF86FF19FACF73AEFA54.text	03D087AEFFA0FF86FF19FACF73AEFA54.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Lingula Bruguiere 1797	<div><p>Genus  Lingula Bruguière, 1797</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Lingula anatina Lamarck, 1801, by designation of ICZN (1985).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFA0FF86FF19FACF73AEFA54	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFA0FF80FCC7FC327017FC20.text	03D087AEFFA0FF80FCC7FC327017FC20.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Pelagodiscus Dall 1908	<div><p>Genus  Pelagodiscus Dall, 1908</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Discina atlantica King, 1868, by original designation (Dall 1908: 440).</p><p>Pelagodiscus atlanticus (King, 1868) (Fig. 2)</p><p>Discina atlantica King, 1868: 170 .</p><p>Discinisca atlantica – Davidson 1888: 200-202, pl. 26, figs 18-22.</p><p>Pelagodiscus atlanticus – Dall 1908: 440. — Thomson 1927: 130, 131, fig. 37. — Helmcke 1940: 230-234. — Cooper 1973c: 10, pl. 5, fig. 36. — Foster 1974: 39, 40, fig. 13. — Zezina 1975: 903-909, figs 1-7; 1981: 8; 1985: 107; 1987: 555. — Lee 1987: 51, 52, fig. 1c-f. — Laurin 1997: 417. — Álvarez &amp; Emig 2005: 103, fig. 56a-h.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Wallis and Futuna. MUS- ORSTOM 7, Combe Bank, stn CP 621, 20 specimens.— Stn CP 623, 4 specimens.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 1280-1300 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 1.</p><p>R EMARKS</p><p>Pelagodiscus atlanticus is one of the most widespread brachiopods, being known from the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian oceans, as well as from northern and southern hemispheres(Emig 1997).The shell is small, oval to subcircular, very thin, chitinophosphatic; the surface smooth with numerous concentric growth lines. The apex is near the valve centre. This species is characterized by its dorsal mantle-edge with numerous setae, short around posterior margin and very long around anterior margin (Fig. 2C). Although having a very wide depth range from 366 to 6000 m (Zezina 1985),  P. atlanticus occurs more often below 1000 m and is regarded as a very deep-water species.</p><p>Subphylum CRANIIFORMEA Popov, Bassett, Holmer &amp; Laurie, 1993 Class  CRANIATA Williams, Carlson, Brunton, Homler &amp; Popov, 1996 Order  CRANIIDA Waagen, 1885 Superfamily  CRANIOIDEA Menke, 1828 Family  CRANIIDAE Menke, 1828</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFA0FF80FCC7FC327017FC20	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFA6FF80FF6BFC73703CFBBA.text	03D087AEFFA6FF80FF6BFC73703CFBBA.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Novocrania Lee & Brunton 2001	<div><p>Genus  Novocrania Lee &amp; Brunton, 2001</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Patella anomala Müller, 1776, by original designation (Lee &amp; Brunton 1986: 150).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFA6FF80FF6BFC73703CFBBA	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFA4FF8DFF04FD51732FFEFE.text	03D087AEFFA4FF8DFF04FD51732FFEFE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Cryptopora Jeffreys 1869	<div><p>Genus  Cryptopora Jeffreys, 1869</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Cryptopora gnomon Jeffreys, 1869, by monotypy (Jeffreys 1869: 136).</p><p>Cryptopora maldivensis Muir-Wood, 1959 (Figs 3D-N)</p><p>Cryptopora maldivensis Muir-Wood, 1959: 293, 294, text-fig. 2; pl. 5, figs 1, 3-7. — Zezina 1985: 113.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Wallis and Futuna. MUS- ORSTOM 7, Wallis, stn DW 601, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>Fiji. MUSORSTOM 10, Bligh Water, stn DW 1314, 2 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1330, 3 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1331, 4 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1332, 13 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1333, 1 complete specimen. — Stn DW 1334, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1341, 60 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1345, 6 complete specimens. — Viti Levu, stn CP 1353, 19 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1354, 1 complete specimen. — Stn DW 1384, 2 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1390, 6 complete specimens.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 200- 963 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 3; see also Figure 4.</p><p>DESCRIPTION Shell very small (maximum observed length is 3.7 mm), variable in outline from subtriangular to elongate oval, very thin and translucent. Surface iridescent,smooth, apart from very fine, widely spaced</p><p>)</p><p>mm</p><p>(</p><p>Width</p><p>Length (mm)</p><p>capillae better visible on the anterior half (Fig. 3J); growth lines numerous. The secondary layer fibres are readily visible on the surface and form a mosaic. Shell very weakly biconvex. Anterior commissure rectimarginate. Beak high and pointed with sharp beak ridges. Foramen large, triangular, hypothyrid, bordered by two narrow, elevated deltidial plates. Ventral valve interior with short teeth supported by distinct divergent dental plates (Fig.3N). Dorsal valve interior with very high but short median septum, small cardinal process in form of depression, and slender crura of maniculiform type (Fig. 3K, L).</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>Cryptopora maldivensis is one of the commonest species (about 115 specimens) in the investigated material. The studied specimens are consistent with the description given by Muir-Wood (1959), differing only in smaller size; the type material reaches about 5 mm.</p><p>In outline and type of the deltidial plates  C. maldivensis is similar to  C. gnomon but it differs in being less convex and rectimarginate, while  C. gnomon is sulcate (Cooper 1959). The shell of  C. gnomon also lacks capillae.</p><p>This is the first record of  Cryptopora from Fiji, and Wallis and Futuna islands although this genus was identified in the Pliocene deposits of Fiji (Cooper 1978).  Cryptopora maldivensis was not found on the Lau Ridge.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFA4FF8DFF04FD51732FFEFE	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFABFF8CFCC1FCF2706CF9E9.text	03D087AEFFABFF8CFCC1FCF2706CF9E9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Basiliola beecheri (Dall 1895)	<div><p>Basiliola beecheri (Dall, 1895)</p><p>(Fig. 5 H-L)</p><p>Hemithyris beecheri Dall, 1895: 717, pl. 31, figs 1-4.</p><p>Basiliola beecheri – Dall 1908: 442. — Cooper 1959: pls 11b, 14a. — Zezina 1985: 115. — Laurin 1997: 420, 421, figs 3, 4, 42 d-k. — Bitner 2006b: 17, fig. 1a-d.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. MUSORSTOM 10, Viti Levu, stn DW 1376, 1 complete specimen. BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn CP 1394, 1 complete specimen, 1 ventral valve, 1 dorsal valve. — Stn DW 1408, 1 ventral valve. — Stn CP 1409, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1412, 21 complete specimens, 1 ventral valve. — Stn DW 1432, 12 complete specimens, 1 dorsal valve. — Stn DW 1464, 1 complete young specimen.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 285- 561 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 5.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>Basiliola beecheri was already recorded from the Fiji region, but was represented by only two specimens and internal structures were not investigated (Bitner 2006b). This medium-sized, strongly dorsibiconvex species has corrugated teeth supported by dental plates close to the valve wall.Its inner socket ridges are long. No cardinal process is present. The outer hinge plates are broad, and crura are of subfalciform type (Fig. 5K, L). The muscle scars are distinct.  Basiliola beecheri can easily be distinguished from  B. lucida by its larger size and much broader hinge plates.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFABFF8CFCC1FCF2706CF9E9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFABFF8DFF20FD9771C3FC81.text	03D087AEFFABFF8DFF20FD9771C3FC81.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Basiliola Dall 1908	<div><p>Genus  Basiliola Dall, 1908</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Hemithyris beecheri Dall, 1895, by original designation (Dall 1908: 442).</p><p>Basiliola lucida (Gould, 1862) (Fig. 5 A-G)</p><p>Rhynchonella lucida Gould, 1862: 120 .</p><p>Neohemithyris lucida – Yabe &amp; Hatai 1934a: 587. — Hatai 1940: 210, pl. 1, fig. 44; pl. 6, figs 106, 107.</p><p>Basiliola lucida – Cooper 1959: 27, pl. 13, figs 6-23. — Zezina 1985: 115. — Laurin 1997: 419, figs 1a-c, 2a-e, 42a-c.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn DW 1469, 58 complete specimens, 6 ventral valves, 6 dorsal valves. — Stn DW 1472, 3 complete specimens.— Stn DW 1497, 2 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1506, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 262- 377 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 4.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>Basiliola lucida is an easily recognisable basiliolid species by its small size and elongate outline (Hatai 1940; Cooper 1959; Laurin 1997). The shell is smooth with indistinct growth lines, dorsibiconvex and strongly uniplicate. The foramen is small, submesothyrid; deltidial plates conjunct. The teeth are short but wide, corrugated, while the dental sockets are deep with grooves corresponding to those on the teeth. The dorsal interior has subfalciform crura distally serrate and narrow outer hinge plates. No cardinal process is present.</p><p>Basiliola lucida differs from  B. beecheri in smaller size and much narrower hinge plates.</p><p>Basiliola roddai Cooper, 1978 from the Pliocene- Pleistocene deposits of Fiji is very close to  B. lucida . It differs in being more strongly and narrowly uniplicate and in having a more convex dorsal valve (Cooper 1978).</p><p>This is the first record of this species from the Fiji region, from the Lau Ridge.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFABFF8DFF20FD9771C3FC81	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFABFF8DFF22FE1573CFFE7C.text	03D087AEFFABFF8DFF22FE1573CFFE7C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Pugnacoidea	<div><p>Superfamily  PUGNACOIDEA</p><p>Rzhonsnitskaya, 1956</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFABFF8DFF22FE1573CFFE7C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFA9FF8FFF74FDF776ACFC67.text	03D087AEFFA9FF8FFF74FDF776ACFC67.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Abyssothyris Thomson 1927	<div><p>Genus  Abyssothyris Thomson, 1927</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Terebratula wyvilli Davidson, 1878, by original designation (Thomson 1927: 190).</p><p>Abyssothyris wyvillei (Davidson, 1878) (Fig. 6 I-L)</p><p>Terebratula Wyvilli Davidson, 1878: 436 .</p><p>Terebratula Wyvillii – Davidson 1880: 27, pl. 2, figs 7, 9.  Liothyris Wyvillii – Davidson 1886: 15, 16, pl. 2, figs 10-14 (not 8, 9).</p><p>Terebratula wywillei – Blochmann 1908: 625.</p><p>Abyssothyris wyvillei – Cooper 1982: 8, pl. 2, figs 13-17; 1983: pl. 2, figs 1-4. — Zezina 1985:147; 1998: 70-71. — Foster 1989: 282, 283, figs 9.1-9.3, 10.1-10.10. — Laurin 1997: 432-434, figs 19, 20, 43m-r. — Bitner 2006b: 18-20, fig. 1f-m.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. MUSORSTOM 10, Viti Levu, stn CP 1361, 2 complete specimens.</p><p>BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn DW 1408, 3 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1409, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1413, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 550-1091 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 6.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>Abyssothyris wyvillei was reported from the Fiji Islands by Bitner (2006b). This small, smooth species is characterized by its deeply unisulcate anterior commissure, and cardinalia with a distinct half-elliptical cardinal process, long inner socket ridges and well-developed fulcral plates. The outer hinge plates are triangular and moderately wide. The loop is very short, rounded</p><p>Station No. Length Width Thickness Figure</p><p>CP 1361 9.7 10.5 6.1 Fig. 6 I-L CP 1361 9.8 9.8 5.8 – CP 1409 9.3 9.7 6.3 –</p><p>anteriorly with a transverse band weakly medially folded (Fig. 6L). The crural processes are short and bluntly pointed.</p><p>The specimens from Fiji are most similar to those from the New Caledonia region (Laurin 1997). They differ from other specimens hitherto described in having smaller foramen (Cooper 1982, 1983; Foster 1989).</p><p>Externally  A. wyvillei is very similar to another species,  Nipponithyris lauensis n. sp., but these species can be easily distinguished by their internal structures.</p><p>The specimens from the Miocene of Fiji described by Cooper (1978) as  Abyssothyris briggsi are close in size and outline to  A. wyvillei but they differ from the recent species in the much narrower loop.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFA9FF8FFF74FDF776ACFC67	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFA9FF8FFD31FB8C7610FB1F.text	03D087AEFFA9FF8FFD31FB8C7610FB1F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Xenobrochus Cooper 1981	<div><p>Genus  Xenobrochus Cooper, 1981</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Gryphus africanus Cooper, 1973b, by original designation (Cooper 1981: 19).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFA9FF8FFD31FB8C7610FB1F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFA9FF89FCDDFB6E707CF928.text	03D087AEFFA9FF89FCDDFB6E707CF928.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Xenobrochus rotundus Bitner 2008	<div><p>Xenobrochus rotundus n. sp.</p><p>(Fig. 6 A-H)</p><p>TYPE MATERIAL. — Fiji. BORDAU 1, stn DW 1469, holotype (MNHN BRA-3075; Fig.6 A-D). — Same data, 2 paratypes (MNHN BRA-3076-3077; Fig. 6 E-H) .</p><p>TYPE LOCALITY. — Fiji Islands, Lau Ridge, BORDAU 1, stn DW 1469, 19°40.01’S, 178°10.24’W, 314- 377 m.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY. — From the Latin  rotundus, round, referring to rounded outline.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS. —  Xenobrochus rounded in outline with small foramen, prominent cardinal process, outer hinge plates rudimentary to absent, and transverse band anteriorly convex with a slight median fold.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. Wallis and Futuna. MUS- ORSTOM 7, Futuna, stn DW 516, 1 complete specimen. — Wallis, stn DW 610, 1 complete specimen, 1 ventral valve. — Stn DW 612, 1 ventral valve.</p><p>Fiji. BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn DW 1469, 7 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1496, 3 complete specimens.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 255- 550 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 7.</p><p>DESCRIPTION</p><p>Shell small (maximum observed length is 9.4 mm), rounded in outline and strongly biconvex. Shell surface smooth with numerous indistinct growth lines. Lateral commissure is slightly ventrally curved; anterior commissure rectimarginate. Beak suberect with a small mesothyrid foramen.Symphytium small and wholly visible. Pedicle collar short. Teeth wide, short. Inner socket ridges erect. Cardinal process broad, transversely semi-elliptical. Outer hinge plates rudimentary to absent. The crural processes are short, bluntly pointed and run upward, nearly parallel to each other. Loop very short; transverse band anteriorly convex, rounded with a weak median fold. Muscle scars well visible.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>The investigated specimens display all the characters, such as small size, smooth surface, short loop with transverse band anteriorly convex, typical of the genus  Xenobrochus (Cooper 1981) . Until now seven species have been assigned to this genus (Cooper 1981, 1983; Hiller 1986, 1994a, b), and specimens from Fiji differ from all of them in rounded outline and much smaller foramen. From  X. africanus (Cooper, 1973),  X. australis Cooper, 1981 and  X. naudei Hiller, 1994,  X. rotundus n. sp. differs in having rounded transverse band with a slight median fold; the first three species have angular transverse band. In  X. translucidus (Dall, 1920),  X. agulhasensis (Helmcke, 1938),  X. africanus and  X. naudei outer hinge plates, although narrow, are distinct (Cooper 1973b; Hiller 1986, 1994a), while in the studied specimens outer hinge plates are rudimentary to absent.  Xenobrochus indianensis (Cooper, 1973), having similar loop with a median fold and rudimentary outer hinge plates, has a more incurved beak with partly concealed symphytium. In the specimens from Fiji the symphytium is wholly visible. In turn,  X. anomalus Cooper, 1981 from the waters around Marion Island is characterized by the extravagantly developed tubular pedicle collar (Cooper 1981; Hiller 1994b), a feature not observed in the specimens described here.</p><p>Superfamily  TEREBRATULOIDEA Gray, 1840 Family  TEREBRATULIDAE Gray, 1840</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFA9FF89FCDDFB6E707CF928	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFAFFF89FCDFFD307622FD42.text	03D087AEFFAFFF89FCDFFD307622FD42.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Dallithyridinae Katz & Popov 1974	<div><p>Subfamily  DALLITHYRIDINAE</p><p>Katz &amp; Popov, 1974</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFAFFF89FCDFFD307622FD42	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFAFFF8BFD21FD51707FFBEB.text	03D087AEFFAFFF8BFD21FD51707FFBEB.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Dallithyris Muir-Wood 1959	<div><p>Genus  Dallithyris Muir-Wood, 1959</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Dallithyris murrayi Muir-Wood, 1959, by original designation (Muir-Wood 1959: 305).</p><p>Dallithyris pacifica Bitner, 2006 (Fig. 7 J-L)</p><p>Dallithyris pacifica Bitner, 2006b: 20-22, fig. 2a-j.; Bitner 2007: 495, 496, figs 1i-k, 2c, d.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. MUSORSTOM 10, Bligh Water, stn CP 1331, 8 complete specimens, 2 ventral valves. — Stn CP 1332, 9 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1335, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CC 1336, 4 complete specimens.</p><p>BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn DW 1432, 1 young complete specimen. — Stn DW 1465, 1 young complete specimen.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 290- 799 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 8.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>Dallithyris pacifica was already recorded from the Fiji region (for detailed description, see Bitner 2006b, 2007). This species differs from two other recent  Dallithyris species,  D. murrayi Muir-Wood, 1959 and  D. fulva (Blochmann, 1906), in being smaller, triangular in outline and having rectimarginate anterior commissure (Muir-Wood 1959; Cooper 1983). Recently  D. pacifica was also found in the region of the Austral Islands, French Polynesia (Bitner 2007).</p><p>Dallithyris was also recognized in the Neogene deposits of Fiji (Cooper 1978). The fossil specimens are much smaller than  D. pacifica, however, like the recent material they are characterized by the subtriangular outline and rectimarginate commissure.</p><p>In her recent paper Zezina (2005) synonymised three genera:  Dallithyris,  Stenosarina Cooper, 1977 and  Dolichozygus Cooper, 1983 . However, in the opinion of the present author those genera display sufficient differences to be separated. Both  Dallithyris and  Stenosarina have similar loops with a broad transverse band which possesses a strong median fold, but the loop in  Stenosarina is much narrower than that in  Dallithyris (see Bitner 2006b: fig. 2j, k). The crural bases in  Dallithyris are poorly defined, while those in  Stenosarina are elevated along the inner margins of the outer hinge plates. In turn, the transverse band in  Dolichozygus lacks that sharply arched fold present in both former genera. Thus, in the present paper  Dallithyris is still considered as a separate genus, as in the new edition of the Treatise (see Lee &amp; Smirnova 2006).</p><p>Superfamily  CANCELLOTHYRIDOIDEA</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFAFFF8BFD21FD51707FFBEB	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFADFF8AFF79FB4E7001FB65.text	03D087AEFFADFF8AFF79FB4E7001FB65.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Terebratulina d'Orbigny 1847	<div><p>Genus  Terebratulina d’Orbigny, 1847</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Anomia retusa Linnaeus, 1758, by subsequent designation (Brunton et al. 1967: 176).</p><p>Terebratulina japonica (G. B. Sowerby, 1846) (Fig. 7 A-D)</p><p>Terebratula japonica G. B. Sowerby, 1846: 91 .</p><p>Terebratulina japonica – Davidson 1886: 34, pl. 3, figs 7-11. — Dall 1920: 304, 305. — Hatai 1940: 225-228, pl. 8, figs 14, 16. — Zezina 1985: 128. — Bitner 2006b: 22, 23, figs 3, 4a-g.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. MUSORSTOM10, Bligh Water, stn CP 1330, 9 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1333, 3 complete immature specimens. — Stn DW 1345, 2 complete immature specimens. — Viti Levu, stn CP 1363, 2 complete immature specimens. — Stn DW 1365, 3 young complete specimens. — Stn DW 1377, 4 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1383, 11 complete specimens.</p><p>BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn CP 1393, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1394, 24 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1397, 3 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1404, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1412, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1413, 15 complete specimens, 1 ventral valve. — Stn DW 1421, 1 immature complete specimen. — Stn DW 1439, 1 complete specimen. — Stn DW 1440, 2 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1450, 1 complete specimen. — Stn DW 1451, 7 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1453, 3 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1460, 9 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1472, 2 young complete specimens. — Stn DW 1486, 2 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1488, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1490, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1491, 2 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1498, 3 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1506, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>SUVA 2, Suva Lagoon, stn BS 18, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 83- 820 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 9.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>This is a common species found in 28 stations. Its presence was already noted from the Fiji region (Bitner 2006b).  Terebratulina japonica is a mediumsized species, ornamented by numerous, fine ribs. The ring of the loop is subquadrate in outline (see Bitner 2006b: fig. 4f, g).  Terebratulina waimanensis Ladd, 1934 described from the Miocene deposits of Fiji shows a great similarity in size and ornamentation to  T. japonica .</p><p>Station No. Length Width Thickness Figure DW 1479 11.3 10.9 4.8 –</p><p>DW 1479 11.1 10.2 5.1 –</p><p>DW 1479 7.4 7.7 2.9 Fig. 7E DW 1485 10.0 10.3 4.2 Fig. 7 F-I</p><p>Terebratulina australis Bitner, 2006 (Fig. 7 E-I)</p><p>Terebratulina australis Bitner 2006b: 25-27, fig. 5d-j.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn DW 1417, 1 dorsal valve. — Stn DW 1479, 3 complete specimens, 1 dorsal valve. — Stn DW 1485, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 353- 707 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 10.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>This species was already recorded from the Fiji region (Bitner 2006b).It is very rare in the investigated material.  Terebratulina australis can be easily distinguished from any other  Terebratulina species by its rounded outline, short hinge margin and a very small foramen. The shell surface is covered with numerous distinct ribs that increase mostly by bifurcation.The posterior part of the shell is thickened with well-visible muscle scars. The dorsal valve interior with high, narrow inner socket ridges, short crura and a broad ring sharply arched (see Bitner 2006b: fig. 5i, j).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFADFF8AFF79FB4E7001FB65	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFACFF8AFF19FA8F71C9FB06.text	03D087AEFFACFF8AFF19FA8F71C9FB06.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Terebratulina reevei Dall 1920	<div><p>Terebratulina reevei Dall, 1920</p><p>(Fig. 8)</p><p>Terebratulina reevei Dall, 1920: 305, 306. — Cooper 1973a: 379, 380, pl. 42, figs 19-33. — Zezina 1981: 14; 1985: 130. — Laurin 1997: 427, figs 12a-c, 43d-f. — Bitner 2006b: 23-25, fig. 4h-l.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. MUSORSTOM 10, Bligh Water, stn CP 1330, 1 complete immature specimen. — Viti Levu, stn DW 1383, 1 complete young specimen. BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn CP 1394, 3 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1395, 2 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1439, 1 complete specimen. — Stn DW 1451,</p><p>Station No. Length Width Thickness Figure DW 1394 10.0 7.6 4.7 Fig. 8 E-G DW 1394 9.6 6.8 4.2 Fig. 8 A-D CP 1395 9.3 6.9 3.2 –</p><p>DW 1451 9.7 7.6 4.2 –</p><p>BS 18 6.4 5.7 3.1 –</p><p>BS 18 4.8 4.3 2.3 –</p><p>2 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1496, 1 complete immature specimen. — Stn DW 1494, 2 complete specimens.</p><p>SUVA 2, Suva Lagoon, stn BS 18, 3 complete specimens.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 83- 669 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 11.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>Terebratulina reevei was already reported from the Fiji region (Bitner 2006b). This species is characterized by its coarsely ribbed ornamentation (Cooper 1973a; Laurin 1997). The anterior commissure is from uniplicate to rectimarginate. The loop forms a broad ring slightly folded anteriorly.</p><p>Terebratulina reevei differs from  T. japonica in being smaller and in having less numerous granulated ribs. It can be also easily distinguished from  T. australis that has rounded outline, numerous fine ribs and small pedicle opening.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFACFF8AFF19FA8F71C9FB06	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFACFF97FD01FA8E707CFC81.text	03D087AEFFACFF97FD01FA8E707CFC81.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Eucalathis Fischer & Oehlert 1890	<div><p>Genus  Eucalathis Fischer &amp; Oehlert, 1890</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Terebratulina murrayi Davidson, 1878 by original designation (Fischer &amp; Oehlert 1890: 72).</p><p>Eucalathis rugosa Cooper, 1973 (Fig. 9)</p><p>Eucalathis rugosa Cooper, 1973a:388, 389, text-fig.2, pl. 43, figs 1-9. — Zezina 1985: 135; 1987: 556. — d’Hondt 1987: 35. — Laurin 1997: 428, 429, figs 13a-c, 14.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Wallis and Futuna. MUSOR- STOM 7, Wallis, stn DW 601, 1 complete specimen, 1 dorsal valve.</p><p>Fiji. MUSORSTOM 10, Viti Levu, stn DW 1384, 4 complete specimens.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 260- 305 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 12.</p><p>DESCRIPTION</p><p>Shell very small (maximum length 2.9 mm), subquadrate to broadly triangular in outline, biconvex. Shell surface covered with 8-10 strongly granulated ribs; single intercalated ribs are also present. Beak fairly long, suberect. Foramen large, triangular, bordered by two narrow, obliquely elevated deltidial plates. Anterior commissure rectimarginate. Teeth short but wide.Pedicle collar well-developed.Dorsal valve interior with high inner socket ridges and weakly developed cardinal process. Crura very short with blunt crural processes. Loop short with relatively broad descending branches. Inner margin of both valves crenulated.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>The investigated specimens are consistent in size, strong ornamentation and beak characters with  Eucalathis rugosa . They differ, however, in having short intercalated ribs and broader descending branches. In the strong costation  E. rugosa is similar to  E. rotundata Cooper, 1981, differing, however, in outline and beak characters.</p><p>In the Pacific Ocean this species was already recorded from Philippines and New Caledonia (Cooper 1973a; d’Hondt 1987; Laurin 1997). Zezina (1987) mentioned the presence of  E. rugosa in the Mozambique Channel, Indian Ocean. The occurrence of this species in the region of the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna Islands extends its geographic range farther to the east.</p><p>The genus  Eucalathis is well-known in the southwestern Pacific (Cooper 1973a; Dawson 1991; Laurin 1997; Bitner 2006a) but this is its first record from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna regions.</p><p>Suborder  TEREBRATELLIDINA Muir-Wood, 1955 Superfamily  KINGENOIDEA Elliott, 1948 Family  AULACOTHYROPSIDAE Dagys, 1972 Subfamily  BABUKELLINAE MacKinnon, Smirnova &amp; Lee, 2006</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFACFF97FD01FA8E707CFC81	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFB1FF97FF27FC91768BFC81.text	03D087AEFFB1FF97FF27FC91768BFC81.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Fallax Atkins 1960	<div><p>Genus  Fallax Atkins, 1960</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Fallax dalliniformis Atkins, 1960, by original designation (Atkins 1960: 72).</p><p>Fallax neocaledonensis Laurin, 1997 (Fig. 10 H-J)</p><p>Campages furcifera – d’Hondt 1987: 37, pl. 1, figs 1-4.</p><p>Fallax neocaledonensis Laurin, 1997: 444-448, figs 31-34, 46a-o. — Bitner 2006b: 27, fig. 5a-c.</p><p>Laurinia neocaledonensis – Zezina 2005: 31, 32.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn CP 1458, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 1216-1226 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — Length 15.5 mm, width 14.4 mm, thickness 10.2 mm.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>Fallax neocaledonensis was originally described from the New Caledonia region where it is one of the most common species (Laurin 1997; and pers. obs.). However, in the studied material it is very rare, although it has already been reported from the Fiji region (Bitner 2006b).  Fallax neocaledonensis is characterized by its widely triangular outline. Although externally similar to the dallinine brachiopods, it is easily distinguishable internally by the presence of distinct dental plates.</p><p>The specimens described earlier from the New Caledonia region by d’Hondt (1987) as  Campages furcifera Hedley, 1905, after examination of internal structures, appeared to possess distinct dental plates, which exclude them from  Campages . On the contrary, they display all the characters typical of  F. neocaledonensis and have been synonymised with the latter species in the present paper.</p><p>Recently Zezina (2005) transferred the species  F.neocaledonensis into a new genus  Laurinia, based on the absence of spicules in the specimens investigated by her from the Norfolk Ridge, New Caledonia, because spicules are observed in  Fallax . It seems doubtful whether absence of spicules in a genus characterized by weak spiculation is sufficient to create a new genus.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFB1FF97FF27FC91768BFC81	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFB1FF97FD3CFCF2767CFC31.text	03D087AEFFB1FF97FD3CFCF2767CFC31.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Septicollarina Zezina 1981	<div><p>Genus  Septicollarina Zezina, 1981</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Septicollarina hemiechinata Zezina, 1981 by original designation (Zezina 1981: 16).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFB1FF97FD3CFCF2767CFC31	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFB7FF91FCC5FBB37633FBF9.text	03D087AEFFB7FF91FCC5FBB37633FBF9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Argyrotheca Dall 1900	<div><p>Genus  Argyrotheca Dall, 1900</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Terebratula cuneata Risso, 1826, by original designation (Dall 1900: 44).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFB7FF91FCC5FBB37633FBF9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFB7FF91FF2FFD5171EAFCE0.text	03D087AEFFB7FF91FF2FFD5171EAFCE0.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Frenulina Dall 1895	<div><p>Genus  Frenulina Dall, 1895</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Anomia sanguinolenta Gmelin, 1791 by original designation (Dall 1895: 724).</p><p>Frenulina sanguinolenta (Gmelin, 1791) (Fig. 10 C-G)</p><p>Anomia sanguinolenta Gmelin, 1791: 3347 .</p><p>Megerlia sanguinea – Davidson 1887: 108-111, pl. 20, figs 1-8.</p><p>Frenulina sanguinolenta – Dall 1920: 336, 337. — Hatai 1940: 327-329, pl. 4, figs 42, 44-47, 49, 50, 52-54. — Cooper 1973b: 21, 22, pl. 6, figs 1-3; pl. 8, figs 12-16. — Zezina 1985: 168. — Emig 1987: 169, pl. 2.V.1, figs b, c. — d’Hondt 1987: 38. — Saito 1996: 492, fig. 5. — Laurin 1997: 450, 451, fig. 47h-j. — Bitner 2006a: 420-422, figs 2d-m, 3a-f; 2006b: 28.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. BORDAU 1, Lau Rigde, stn CP 1394, 1 complete specimen. — Stn DW 1451, 1 complete specimen. — Stn DW 1453, 2 complete specimens.</p><p>SUVA 2, Suva Lagoon, stn BS 43, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>SUVA 4, Beqa Lagoon, stn DW 08, 1 complete specimen. — Stn DW 09, 2 complete specimens.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 26- 510 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 13.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>Although common and widely distributed in the western Pacific (Davidson 1887; Thomson 1918, 1927; Dall 1920; Jackson &amp; Stiasny 1937; Hatai 1940; Richardson 1973a, b, 1979; Zezina 1985; Emig 1987; d’Hondt 1987; Saito 1996; Laurin 1997; Bitner 2006a, c),  Frenulina sanguinolenta is rare in the material from Fiji, and has been found only in seven stations (see also Bitner 2006b). It is an easily recognisable species by its small, sulcate shell and red colour pattern.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFB7FF91FF2FFD5171EAFCE0	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFB6FF92FD24FEF47040FB45.text	03D087AEFFB6FF92FD24FEF47040FB45.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Amphithyris Thomson 1918	<div><p>Genus  Amphithyris Thomson, 1918</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Amphithyris buckmani Thomson, 1918 by original designation (Thomson 1918: 20).</p><p>Amphithyris buckmani Thomson, 1918 (Fig. 11)</p><p>Amphithyris buckmani Thomson, 1918: 22, pl. 15, fig. 9; pl. 16, fig. 35. — Bitner 2006b: 28-30, fig. 6a-f.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. MUSORSTOM 10, Bligh Water, stn CP 1309, 11 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1314, 3 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1316, 1 complete specimen.— Stn CP 1330, 1 complete specimen.— Stn CP 1331, 143 complete specimens, 4 dorsal valves.— Stn CP 1332, 212 complete specimens, 1 dorsal valve.— Stn DW 1333, 5 complete specimens.— Stn DW 1334, 3complete specimens. — Stn CP 1335, 8 complete specimens. — Stn CC 1336, 6 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1341, 17 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1345, 3 complete specimens, 1 ventral valve. — Viti Levu, stn CP 1353, 36 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1354, 25 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1359, 2 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1360, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1369, 7 complete specimens, 3 ventral valves, 2 dorsal valves.</p><p>BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn CP 1392, 3 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1394, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1396, about 160 complete specimens attached to the rock. — Stn CP 1398, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1413, 2 complete specimens.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 183- 963 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 14; see also Figure 12.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>Amphithyris buckmani, already recorded from Fiji (Bitner 2006b), is the commonest species (more than 600 specimens) in the studied material. This species is easily recognisable by its very small size, radially ornamented and convex ventral valve, smooth and flat dorsal valve, and large amphithyrid foramen.The specimens in the new material are slightly larger than those previously described from Fiji. The outline is very variable, from transversely oval to subcircular and subtriangular. The shell can be asymmetrical,</p><p>)</p><p>mm</p><p>(</p><p>Width</p><p>Length (mm)</p><p>depending in shape on the substrate (Fig. 11F) as  A. buckmani lives closely attached to the substrate by a very short pedicle. The dorsal valve interior with high inner socket ridges and short, very low median septum. The schizolophous lophophore remains fused to the body wall (Fig. 11K, L).</p><p>Amphithyris buckmani differs from two known other  Amphithyris species,  A. hallettensis Foster, 1974 and  A. richardsonae Campbell &amp; Fleming, 1981, in larger size and radial ornamentation of the ventral valve (Foster 1974; Campbell &amp; Fleming 1981).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFB6FF92FD24FEF47040FB45	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFB4FF92FF67FAEF7013FA34.text	03D087AEFFB4FF92FF67FAEF7013FA34.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leptothyrella Muir-Wood 1965	<div><p>Genus  Leptothyrella Muir-Wood, 1965</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Leptothyris ignota Muir-Wood, 1959 by original designation (Muir-Wood 1959: 308).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFB4FF92FF67FAEF7013FA34	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFB4FF9CFF22F9A971BEFB06.text	03D087AEFFB4FF9CFF22F9A971BEFB06.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Leptothyrella fijiensis Bitner 2008	<div><p>Leptothyrella fijiensis n. sp.</p><p>(Fig. 13)</p><p>TYPE MATERIAL. — Fiji.  Bligh Water, MUSORSTOM 10, stn CP 1332, holotype (MNHN BRA-3101;</p><p>Fig. 13 B-E). — Fiji, MUSORSTOM 10,  Bligh Water, stn CP 1332 and Viti Levu, stn CP 1354, 4 paratypes (MNHN BRA-3102-3104, 3106; Fig. 13 F-L)  .</p><p>TYPE LOCALITY. — Fiji Islands, Bligh Water, MUSORS- TOM 10, 16°56.17’S, 178°07.86’E, 640- 687 m.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY. — From the geographical name “ Fiji ”, type locality of the species.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS. —  Leptothyrella having rows of small tubercles at both sides of the beak, short, recessive dental plates, and descending branches attached to the rod-like septum.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. MUSORSTOM 10, Bligh Water, stn CP 1309, 1 ventral valve. — Stn DW 1314, 2 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1330, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1331, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1332, 82 complete specimens, 1 ventral valve, 1 dorsal valve. — Stn CP 1341, 23 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1345, 3 complete specimens. — Viti Levu, stn CP 1353, 62 complete specimens, 1 ventral valve, 1 dorsal valve. — Stn CP 1354, 34 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1363, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1366, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1369, 2 complete specimens.— Stn DW 1384, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 144- 963 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 15; see also Figure 14.</p><p>DESCRIPTION</p><p>Shell small (maximum observed length 4.4 mm), elongate oval in outline with greatest width at about midlength; dorsal valve often subcircular. Shell surface smooth, except for weakly defined concentric growth lines, and coarsely punctate. Both valves are weakly biconvex. Anterior commissure rectimarginate. Beak high, truncated by a large, triangular hypothyrid foramen bordered by very narrow deltidial plates; beak ridges strong. At both sides of the beak there are two rows of small tubercles (Fig. 13J). Pedicle collar sessile. Teeth small supported by short, thick dental plates (Fig. 13K). Dorsal valve interior with a high median septum with rod-like extremity. Inner socket ridges high but narrow. No cardinal process or hinge plates are present. Crura very long and slender; crural processes very weakly developed. Descending branches attached to the septum; ascending branches absent. Lophophore zygolophous, heavily spiculate (Fig. 13H).</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>The genus  Leptothyrella was originally described from the Indian Ocean by Muir-Wood (1959); however the re-examination of the type material has shown that her</p><p>Length (mm)</p><p>description contains several errors (D. MacKinnon, pers.comm.). Dental plates, not seen by Muir-Wood (1959) are present in the type material. Muir-Wood (1959) also misidentified the lophophore of  Leptothyrella as spirolophous when it is zygolophous.In 1981 Zezina created a new genus  Phaneropora, with type species  P.galatheae Zezina, 1981 from the SW Pacific (Fig. 15), because based on Muir-Wood’s (1959) original description she recognized that  Leptothyrella and  Phaneropora are distinct genera. The characters distinguishing  Phaneropora from  Leptothyrella, according to Zezina (1981), were the presence of dental plates and zygolophous lophophore. However, she also included into  Phaneropora the species from the Atlantic described by Davidson (1880),  Magasella incerta which resembles  P. galatheae (see Zezina 1981: 18) but differs in the loop development. The loop of  P.galatheae possesses a gap between the crura and the septal pillar (see Fig. 15 C-E); at the distal extremity of each of the crura there is a prominent flattened area that is the rudiment of a descending branch (Fig. 15F). In turn, the species from the Atlantic has continuous, from crura to the septum, descending branches (Davidson 1887; Logan 1983, 1998; Gaspard 2003; Álvarez &amp; Emig 2005). In the revised edition of the Treatise, MacKinnon &amp; Lee (2006a: 2227) transferred  Phaneropora incerta into  Leptothyrella, making the absence or presence of descending branches the main criterion to separate the genera  Leptothyrella and  Phaneropora . In other characters those two taxa are very similar and there is still uncertainty about their status, and only a study of their genetic relationship would help in resolving this problem.</p><p>Until now only two species of  Leptothyrella have been recognized:  L. ignota (Muir-Wood, 1959) from the western Indian Ocean and  L. incerta (Davidson, 1880) from the Atlantic. The newly described species,  L. fijiensis n. sp. is the third one known. It differs from the type species,  L. ignota in slightly smaller size, more rounded outline and distinctly tuberculate beak ridges. Its valves are equally convex, while in  L. ignota the convexity of the ventral valve is slightly greater than that of the dorsal valve (Muir-Wood 1959).</p><p>The Atlantic  L. incerta differs from  L. fijiensis n. sp. in lacking tubercles along the sides of the beak and in having strong dental plates (Davidson 1887; Logan 1983, 1998; Gaspard 2003; Álvarez &amp; Emig 2005). Also its crura are more massive than those in the Fiji specimens.</p><p>The bathymetric range of  L. fijiensis n. sp. is from 144 to 963 m. The species  L. incerta and  L. ignota have much wider depth range, 312-5300 m (Logan 1983, 1988, 1998; Zezina 2000; Gaspard 2003; Álvarez &amp; Emig 2005) and 850-2881 m (Muir- Wood 1959; Hiller 1986), respectively. The depth of the related species  P. galatheae is also very wide, from 225 to 3493 m (Zezina 1981, 1987; Foster 1989; Laurin 1997).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFB4FF9CFF22F9A971BEFB06	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFBAFF9EFCDBFAEF7307F928.text	03D087AEFFBAFF9EFCDBFAEF7307F928.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Dallina Beecher 1893	<div><p>Genus  Dallina Beecher, 1893</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Terebratula septigera Lovén, 1846 by original designation (Beecher 1893: 382).</p><p>Dallina triangularis Yabe &amp; Hatai, 1934 (Fig. 16 B-G)</p><p>Dallina triangularis Yabe &amp; Hatai, 1934b: 662, figs 31-35. — Hatai 1940: 320, pl. 7, figs 22-27.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn CP 1394, 1 young complete specimen. — Stn CP 1409, 2 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1458, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 260-1226 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 16.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>The investigated specimens correspond in size and outline with those described as  Dallina triangularis from off Japan (Hatai 1940). The shell is of medium size, thin, ventribiconvex, triangular in outline, widest at anterior part. The anterior commissure is broadly paraplicate. The beak is erect to suberect with a large, circular permesothyrid foramen. The symphytium is small. The ventral valve interior with small teeth without dental plates and very short pedicle collar. The inner and outer hinge plates are separated by distinct crural bases. The median septum is very long, high posteriorly and very low anteriorly. The loop is teloform, not attached to the septum, with long slender descending branches and broad ascending branches. The loops in the investigated specimens are so delicate that it has not been possible to remove the tissues without breaking the loop.</p><p>Dallina triangularis differs from other species occurring in the western Pacific,  D. raphaelis (Dall, 1870),  D. obessa Yabe &amp; Hatai, 1934 and  D. elongata Hatai, 1940, in being smaller, having triangular outline and thinner shell (Hatai 1940; Foster 1989).  Dallina obessa is also more convex.</p><p>The Miocene species  Dallina vitilevensis Ladd, 1934 from Fiji is smaller than the investigated specimens and is more elongate (Ladd 1934: pl. 24, figs 4-7). The systematic position of the Neogene specimens from Fiji assigned by Cooper (1978) to the genus  Dallina is doubtful. Cooper (1978: pl. 1, fig. 26) observed well-developed dental plates which are absent, according to him, in larger specimens. Examination of early growth stages of the  Dallina type species,  D. septigera (Lovén, 1846), confirms the absence of dental plates through all the stages of development (see MacKinnon &amp; Lee 2006b: 2242), thus the specimens with dental plates cannot be assigned to  Dallina .</p><p>Dallina triangularis is very rare in the Fiji collection and this is the first record of  Dallina from off the Fiji Islands.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFBAFF9EFCDBFAEF7307F928	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFB8FF9EFD1AFAAE70E0FA1F.text	03D087AEFFB8FF9EFD1AFAAE70E0FA1F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Nipponithyris Yabe & Hatai 1934	<div><p>Genus  Nipponithyris Yabe &amp; Hatai, 1934</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Nipponithyris nipponensis Yabe &amp; Hatai, 1934 by original designation (Yabe &amp; Hatai 1934a: 588).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFB8FF9EFD1AFAAE70E0FA1F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFB8FF9BFCDDFA697007FEDE.text	03D087AEFFB8FF9BFCDDFA697007FEDE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Nipponithyris lauensis Bitner 2008	<div><p>Nipponithyris lauensis n. sp.</p><p>(Fig. 17)</p><p>TYPE MATERIAL. — Fiji.  Lau Ridge, BORDAU 1, stn DW 1485, holotype (MNHNBRA-3111; Fig.17 D-G).— Same data, stn DW 1408, DW 1432, DW 1485, 4 paratypes (MNHN BRA-3112-3115; Fig. 17 A-C, H-M)  .</p><p>TYPE LOCALITY. — Fiji Islands, Lau Ridge, BORDAU 1, Ridge”, type locality of the species.</p><p>stn DW 1485, 19°02.69’S, 178°29.80’W, 700- 707 m.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS. —  Nipponithyris of medium size, strongly ETYMOLOGY. — Referring to the geographic name “Lau unisulcate, posterior part strongly thickened, teeth with swollen bases, no crura, loop trabelacur with long, slender descending branches and broad transverse band.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Fiji. MUSORSTOM 10, Viti Levu, stn CP 1354, 1 complete specimen. — Stn CP 1361, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn DW 1408, 12 complete specimens, 1 dorsal valve. — Stn CP 1409, 3 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1432, 33 complete specimens. — Stn CP 1458, 2 complete specimens. — Stn DW 1485, 3 complete specimens.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 477-1226 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 17.</p><p>DESCRIPTION</p><p>Shell of medium size with maximum length 13.6 mm, rounded pentagonal, longer than wide, smooth and moderately ventribiconvex. Lateral commissures dorsally curved; anterior commissure from moderately to strongly unisulcate. Beak low, erect to slightly incurved with weakly defined beak ridges. Foramen small, circular, mesothyrid to permesothyrid. Deltidial plates conjunct forming a well-developed, visible symphytium. Posterior part of both valves strongly thickened, making the articulation of the shell very strong. Pedicle collar short. Ventral delthyrial cavity very narrow. Teeth short but strong with swollen bases, below which there are excavated grooves for the reception of the inner socket ridges that are narrow but massive. In the dorsal valve the dental sockets are very deep. Cardinal process semi-elliptical, prominent. Hinge plates are overgrown with secondary thickening (Fig. 17H). Crura absent; crural processes long, needle-like and curved inward (see Fig. 17H, I). Median septum highest at the point of the union with lateral connecting bands and extending anteriorly as a low ridge. Loop trabecular; descending branches long and slender, attached to the septum by the connecting bands (Fig. 17I); ascending branches and a transverse band broad. Muscle scars deeply impressed in both valves.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>The genus  Nipponithyris is characterized by its rounded pentagonal outline and smooth, sulcate shell which is strongly thickened posteriorly (Yabe &amp; Hatai 1934a; Hatai 1940; Cooper 1973b; Laurin 1997). The studied specimens display all those characters, thus indicating their attribution to  Nipponithyris but they differ from  N. nipponensis Yabe &amp; Hatai, 1934 and  N. afra Cooper, 1973 in the absence of crura (see Hatai 1940; Cooper 1973b; Laurin 1997). None of the investigated specimens shows any sign of the development of the crura but their crural processes are long and needle-like, contrary to the short and bluntly pointed crural processes in  N. nipponensis and  N. afra (Cooper 1973b) . Externally, in size and strong sulcation,  N. lauensis n. sp. is close to  N. afra, known from the Indian Ocean (Cooper 1973b; Hiller 1996) and the Loyalty Islands, SW Pacific (Laurin 1997).</p><p>Nipponithyris lauensis n. sp. displays also, both externally and internally, a great similarity to the species from off Vietnam,  Holobrachia vietnamica described by Zezina (2001). Both those species are characterized by the absence of crura.  Holobrachia vietnamica possesses, however, dental plates which differentiate this species from the Fiji material and any  Nipponithyris species.</p><p>The specimens under study are also similar to  N.fijiensis (Elliott, 1961) from the Upper Miocene-Lower Pliocene deposits of Fiji (Cooper 1978). This latter species was originally described from the Neogene of Fiji by Elliott (1961) under the name  Abyssothyris fijiensis . However, examination of the internal structure (Cooper 1978) revealed that it possesses a median septum that eliminates it from assignment to  Abyssothyris . Although indicating similarity to  Nipponithyris, Cooper (1978) created for this material a new genus:  Dicrosia . In the revised edition of the Treatise,  Dicrosia is treated as a synonym of  Nipponithyris (MacKinnon &amp; Lee 2006b) .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFB8FF9BFCDDFA697007FEDE	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFBDFF9BFF1DFE3573CBFD8D.text	03D087AEFFBDFF9BFF1DFE3573CBFD8D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Campages Hedley 1905	<div><p>Genus  Campages Hedley, 1905</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Campages furcifera Hedley, 1905 by original designation (Hedley 1905: 43).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFBDFF9BFF1DFE3573CBFD8D	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFFBDFFA5FEC8FD97731AFEDE.text	03D087AEFFBDFFA5FEC8FD97731AFEDE.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Campages ovalis Bitner 2008	<div><p>Campages ovalis n. sp.</p><p>(Fig. 18)</p><p>TYPE MATERIAL. — Fiji.  Lau Ridge, BORDAU 1, stn DW 1469, holotype, (MNHN BRA-3116; Fig. 18A, B). — Same data, 3 paratypes (MNHN BRA-3117-3119; Fig. 18 C-J)  .</p><p>TYPE LOCALITY. — Fiji, Lau Ridge, BORDAU 1, stn DW 1469, 19°40.01’S, 178°10.24’W, 314- 377 m.</p><p>ETYMOLOGY. — From the Latin oval, referring to the oval outline of the shell.</p><p>DIAGNOSIS. —  Campages of small size, elongate oval in outline, strongly biconvex, rectimarginate, descending branches slender, hood very broad.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Wallis and Futuna. MUS- ORSTOM 7, Futuna, stn DW 513, 1 complete specimen.</p><p>Fiji. BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn DW 1410, 1 young complete specimen. — Stn DW 1440, 1 complete specimen. — Stn DW 1469, 19 complete specimens, 2 ventral valves, 1 dorsal valve. — Stn DW 1485, 2 complete specimens.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 190- 410 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — See Table 18.</p><p>DESCRIPTION</p><p>Shell small, oval in outline, densely punctate, subtransparent and strongly biconvex. Shell surface smooth with indistinct growth lines. Lateral commissures straight; anterior commisure rectimarginate. Beak suberect; no beak ridges are developed. Foramen small, circular, mesothyrid to permesothyrid. Deltidial plates conjunct forming a symphytium. Pedicle collar short. Teeth small without dental plates (Fig. 18F, G). Cardinal process large, transverse, kidney-shaped.Inner socket ridges long. Outer hinge plates well-developed; inner hinge plates fused to the median septum forming septalium (Fig. 18J). Crural bases weakly differentiated. Median septum, constituting half of the valve length, is high posteriorly, sloping rapidly to become very low anteriorly. Crura long, slender with short, sharply pointed crural processes. Loop diploform; descending branches narrow, parallel; hood extremely broad (Fig. 18H, I). Muscle scars strongly defined on both valves.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>The specimens show internally all the characters typical of  Campages . The genus  Jaffaia Thomson, 1927 which has a very similar loop is distinguishable from  Campages by the presence of beak ridges and absence of pedicle collar. The Fiji material differs from other  Campages species in having a relatively small foramen and elongate-oval outline, while typical  Campages is subtriangular. In the revised edition of the Treatise, Logan (2007) listed seven species of  Campages, six of which are known from off Japan (Dall 1920; Hatai 1940). Cooper (1970), in his revision of the genera  Campages and  Japanithyris Thomson, 1927, suggested that  C. basilanica Dall, 1920,  C. mariae (Adams, 1860) and  C. pacifica Hatai, 1940 might be synonymous. All those species, as well as  C. furcifera Hedley, 1905 are much larger than the investigated specimens and their anterior commissure has broad to strong folding (Cooper 1970).  Campages philippinensis Cooper, 1970 is of similar size but differs from the studied material in having distinct growth lines and the ventral valve several times deeper than the dorsal one (Cooper 1970); the shell of  C. ovalis n. sp. is nearly equally biconvex.  Campages nipponensis (Yabe &amp; Hatai, 1935) is similar in size to the investigated material but differs in having prominent growth lines (Yabe &amp; Hatai 1935; Hatai 1940). In size, the specimens from Fiji are also close to  C. dubius (Hatai, 1940) from off Japan, differing in having much smaller foramen and less elongate outline.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFFBDFFA5FEC8FD97731AFEDE	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFF83FFA5FF2CFE56733AF9A9.text	03D087AEFF83FFA5FF2CFE56733AF9A9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Megerlia King 1850	<div><p>Genus  Megerlia King, 1850</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Anomia truncata Linnaeus, 1767, by original designation (King 1850: 145).</p><p>Megerlia truncata (Linnaeus, 1767) (Fig. 19D, E)</p><p>Anomia truncata Linnaeus, 1767: 1152, no. 229.</p><p>Megerlia truncata – Logan 1979: 68-72, text-fig. 21, pl. 9, figs 1-23. — Bitner 1990: 145-147, text-fig. 10, pl. 2, figs 6-9; pl. 7, figs 3-6; pl. 8, figs 1-7. — Bitner 2007: 496, 498, fig. 3I, J.</p><p>Megerlia gigantea – Cooper 1981: 27, 28, pl. 6, figs 1-26. — d’Hondt 1987: 38, 39.</p><p>Megerlia echinata – Laurin 1997: 452, 453, figs 38, 39. — Gaspard 2003: 299, 300, fig. 5 (1-8).</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Wallis and Futuna. MUSOR- STOM 7, Wallis, stn DW 525, 1 complete specimen, 1 ventral valve.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 500- 600 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — Length 4.8 mm, width 5.6 mm, thickness 1.4 mm.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>This species is very rare and was found in only one station near Wallis Island. Although a widespread species,  Megerlia truncata is rare in the Pacific, reported until now only from New Caledonia (Laurin 1997) and the Austral Islands, French Polynesia (Bitner 2007).</p><p>Megerlia gigantea (Deshayes, 1863) appears to be a synonym of  M. truncata (see discussion in Bitner 2007).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFF83FFA5FF2CFE56733AF9A9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
03D087AEFF83FFA5FD3BFE947153F928.text	03D087AEFF83FFA5FD3BFE947153F928.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Thecidellina Thomson 1915	<div><p>Genus  Thecidellina Thomson, 1915</p><p>TYPE SPECIES. —  Thecidium barretti Davidson, 1864 by original designation (Thomson 1915: 462).</p><p>Thecidellina maxilla (Hedley, 1899) (Fig. 19 A-C)</p><p>Thecidea maxilla Hedley, 1899: 508-510, fig. 57.</p><p>Thecidellina maxilla – Dall 1920: 283. — Thomson 1927: 140. — Cooper 1954: 317, pl. 81, figs 1-10. — Zezina 1985: 208. — Laurin 1997: 453, 454, fig. 40a, b. — Lee &amp; Robinson 2003: 350-352, figs 28-35. — Bitner 2007: 498, 499, fig. 3a-h.</p><p>Thecidellina cf.  T. maxilla – Cooper 1964: 1118, pl. 301, figs 15, 16, 18, 19.</p><p>MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Wallis. MUSORSTOM 7, stn DW 604, 1 ventral valve.</p><p>Fiji. MUSORSTOM 10, Bligh Water, stn DW 1333, 1 complete specimen, 4 dorsal valves.</p><p>BORDAU 1, Lau Ridge, stn DW 1463, 1 ventral valve.</p><p>DEPTH RANGE. — 200- 420 m.</p><p>MEASUREMENTS. — Length 6.0 mm, width 4.3 mm.</p><p>REMARKS</p><p>Thecidella maxilla is widely distributed in the Pacific Ocean (Thomson 1927; Cooper 1954; Pajaud 1970; Laurin 1997; Lee &amp; Robinson 2003; Bitner 2007). This is a small species that reaches 6 mm of length in the investigated material. The interarea is triangular with distinct transverse growth lines and no trace of a pseudodeltidium. No septum is observed in the ventral valve. The dorsal valve is subcircular with long median septum. The rim is strongly tuberculate.</p><p>Thecidella maxilla is a shallow water species (Lee &amp; Robinson 2003). The material from Fiji, collected at the depth of 200-420 m is dead and might have been redeposited from shallower water.</p><p>The specimens of  Thecidellina sp. from the Miocene of Fiji, illustrated by Cooper (1978) are very close to  T. maxilla .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D087AEFF83FFA5FD3BFE947153F928	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		Plazi	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra	Bitner, Maria Aleksandra (2008): New data on the recent brachiopods from the Fiji and Wallis and Futuna islands, South-West Pacific. Zoosystema 30 (2): 419-461, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.5392933
