Trigoniidae

The Trigoniidae represent a large and morphologically interesting Family of highly ornamented non-siphonate bivalves. They originated from the Myophoriidae in the Triassic and underwent an explosion of diversity in the Jurassic, reaching an acme in the Cretaceous, although most genera became extinct at the end of this period. The most striking feature of the Trigoniidae, which has attracted attention for centuries, is their striking external ornament. This is usually present as ribs or costae or rows of aligned tubercles. Although they were abundant in the Mesozoic era, they are today represented by only one living genus, Neotrigonia, which inhabits waters off the coast of south Australia.

Neotrigonia - the discovery of a living genus
Before the beginning of the nineteenth century, no trigoniid had been described from rocks younger than the Cretaceous Period. In 1802, however, Francois Peron discovered a living species in waters off the coast of Tasmania. Lamarck named it Trigonia margaritacea in 1804 with Cossmann renaming the genus Neotrigonia in 1912. Today, five living species have been identified, and are all found off the coast of Australia. Neotrigonia probably evolved from Eotrigonia (Eocene to Miocene) in the Miocene.



Previous research on the Trigoniidae
Because of their large size and pronounced ornament, trigoniid bivalves have long attracted interest. Jean Guillaume Bruguiere was the first person to describe an example of Trigonia in 1789. Lamarck later figured specimens from the Oxfordian of France. In England the physician James Parkinson (the discoverer of Parkinson's disease) described examples of Trigonia and Myophorella. Later, James Sowerby and James De Carle Sowerby began to catalogue British examples in earnest. Etheldred Benett added several Upper Jurassic species, although her work was not primarily recognised due to the academic status of women at that time.

In Europe the great Louis Agassiz published, in 1840, a large volume entitled Memoire sur les Trigonies which recognised the large variation encountered within the family, dividing it into eight sections, which was a precursor to the generic classification that occurred some fifty years later. Other notable workers that described and figured trigoniids include Friedrich August von Quenstedt, Alcide d'Orbigny and Georg August Goldfuss.

The major worker on the Trigoniidae in the nineteenth century was John Lycett, a physician from Gloucestershire who published a significant text entitled A Monograph of British Fossil Trigoniae.

Later research - the twentieth century
Work on the Trigoniidae has generally been sparse in the twentieth century and has mainly concentrated upon the development towards a workable taxonomy. Today, knowledge is sufficient to divide the Family into five Subfamilies (see below), which together contain more than sixteen genera, the most abundant being Trigonia, Myophorella, Laevitrigonia, and Orthotrigonia.

Higher level taxonomy

 * Family Trigoniidae
 * Subfamily Trigoniinae
 * Trigonia
 * Agonisca
 * Maoritrigonia
 * Praegonia
 * Minetrigonia
 * ??Pseudomyophorella


 * Subfamily Prosogyrotrigoniinae
 * Prosogyrotrigonia
 * Prorotrigonia


 * Subfamily Psilotrogoniinae
 * Psilotrigonia


 * Subfamily Myophorellinae
 * Frenguilellella
 * Jaworskiella
 * Myophorella
 * Vaugonia
 * Orthotrigonia
 * Scaphotrigonia


 * Subfamily Laevitrigoniinae
 * Laevitrigonia
 * ??Liotrigonia

Family characteristics - trigoniid hinge
Members of the Trigoniidae are identified by the large and complex dentition that joins the two valves together and allows articulation. The teeth and supporting area can take up almost a third of the volume of the shell. The hinge structure is amongst the most complex of all bivalves, namely that the teeth are numerous and ridge-like with strong transverse striations. It is these striations which distinguishes the Trigoniidae from the more primitive Myophoriidae. The Trigoniidae almost certainly evolved by a monophyletic modification of a Triassic myophoriid, with three genera appearing in the Middle Triassic.



Commonly found genera
Trigoniids are commonly found in both limestone, mudstone and sandstone in Jurassic and Cretaceous rocks all over the world. In Britain, examples are numerous in the Upper Jurassic rocks of the Dorset coast, particularly around the village of Osmington Mills. Other Jurassic rocks that yield specimens include the Cornbrash in Yorkshire and the Middle Jurassic sequence in the Cotswolds, particularly around Cleeve Hill, near Cheltenham.

Trigonia
The genus Trigonia is the most readily identifiable member of the family, having a series of strong ribs or costae along the anterior part of the shell exterior. They are the first representatives of the family to appear in the Middle Triassic (Anisian) of Chile and New Zealand. The first European examples (Trigonia costata Parkinson) turn up in the Lower Jurassic (Toarcian) of Sherborne, Dorset and Gundershofen, Switzerland.



Source: Francis, A.O. 2000. The Palaeobiology of the European Jurassic Trigoniidae. Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham, 323pp.

Trigoniidae Trigoniidae