ABSTRACT
The Xenacanthiformes from Central and Eastern European deposits have been extensively studied, but the systematics of the species from the French Carboniferous–Permian Autun Basin (Saône-et-Loire) remains debated. Numerous xenacanthiform remains are still identified under the doubtful genus ‘Expleuracanthus’, and many of them consist of isolated dorsal spines which are difficult to identify. Numerous well-preserved specimens are still undescribed and the diversity of the xenacanthiform fauna from the Autun Basin is poorly understood. For example, specimens of the genus Triodus from the Muse oil-shale bed (OSB) of the Autun Basin have no specific attribution, whereas this genus is widely distributed across European Carboniferous–Permian basins. In this study, we describe new specimens of Triodus from the lowermost Permian of the Muse OSB. They allow the erection of a new species, Triodus aeduorum sp. nov., and discussion of the validity of several species from the same locality: ‘Expleuracanthus’ frossardi is considered as a nomen dubium and other Triodus specimens need for the time being to be left in open nomenclature as Triodus sp. These results highlight the endemism of the Triodus species in each European Carboniferous–Permian basin and raise the question of how they migrated from one to another.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors are grateful to the SHNA and MHNA for having co-organized the excavation campaigns between 2010 and 2014 during which the studied specimens were found. We thank particularly the Gevrey, Barnay, and Jacquemard families, G. Grillot and S. Kunz (Dracy-Saint-Loup Municipality) for their help, D. Chabard (MHNA) for access to the paleontological collections, D. Beaudoin, P. Baudinaud and R. Pillon (SHNA), and G. de Ploëg for the long mechanical preparation of the specimens. For their valuable help in the field, we also thank B. Blanc (Marine), E. Chenal (Éducation Nationale), C. Delhaye (CNRS), I. van Waveren and her students (Naturalis, Leiden), J. Fortuny (ICP, Barcelona), S. Hervet (PaléOvergne), J. Galtier (Montpellier), A. Bercovici (Manchester University), F. Prost (Dijon University), S. Giner (Var Département), K. Rey (ex-BPI), and O. Béthoux, G. Cousin, G. Odin, L. Anseaume, J. Barbier, M. Sanders, D. Perez, J. Falconnet, D. Germain and V. Rouchon (MNHN). We thank the two anonymous reviewers for their remarks that have helped to greatly improve this manuscript. The first author was funded by the Docotoral School ED 341 – E2M2 Évolution Écosystème Microbiologie Modélisation, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, France.