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32 Pericosmus crawfordi – a heart urchin

Heart urchins are shallow burrowers in unconsolidated sediments and intact fossil specimens can sometimes be seen today preserved in life position – they exhibit a distinctive cross-section in cliff exposures. Two large spatangoid genera which are well-represented in the Geology Museum collections are Pericosmus and Taimanawa. Both are large, somewhat flattened and more-or-less heart-shaped with conspicuous ‘petals’ on the upper surface.

 

Two specimens of spatangoid echinoderm Pericosmus crawfordi, the upper surface of OU 39437 and a side-on view of OU 8563. The illustration is of a generic heart urchin showing tube feet reaching the surface for gas exchange. The lighter area around the urchin is probably looser sediment with a higher water content rather than an actual burrow.

Heart urchins are shallow burrowers in unconsolidated sediments and intact fossil specimens can sometimes be seen today preserved in life position – they exhibit a distinctive cross-section in cliff exposures. Two large spatangoid genera which are well-represented in the Geology Museum collections are Pericosmus and Taimanawa. Both are large, somewhat flattened and more-or-less heart-shaped with conspicuous ‘petals’ on the upper surface.

All heart urchins, such as Pericosmus and Taimanawa, would have needed to maintain a water-filled space around them as well as an open conduit to the surface. They would have swallowed sediment in order to feed on the tiny organic particles that made up their diet.

Living in a burrow is a good way of avoiding the attention of predators such as fish, crabs and other echinoderms but it comes with other hazards. Fossil specimens usually show no evidence of predation of other damage and presumably succumbed to burial after a sudden influx of sediment (or just died of old age). The test is very thin in comparison with the size of the animal and sediment would have needed to infill the empty ‘shell’ quite rapidly in order to keep it from being flattened or crushed.

The first mention of this species was by James Hector in 1870 but since he gave no formal description or illustration, the name he gave it is regarded as invalid (a nomen nudum or naked name).

The first valid name applied to this heart urchin is that of FW Hutton, who three years later described and figured Meoma crawfordi (Hutton 1873, p. 42). The species was later transferred to the genus Pericosmus where it remains today. The brackets around the name of the author convey the information that this is not the original genus name. The locality is given as “Oamaru district”, but the exact type locality is unclear. The genus is found around New Zealand in rocks ranging in age from Late Eocene to Late Miocene and there are some records from seas around northern New Zealand today. Most living species in this genus are found in the Indo-Pacific region at depths between 20 and 500 m: those in North Otago rocks were likely in depths of between 20 and 50 m Check.

Well-preserved entire specimens of Pericosmus crawfordi are quite common in the Otekaike Limestone in North Otago and many specimens are held in the Geology Museum collections.

– Written by Jeffrey H Robinson and Daphne E Lee

Specimen number: OU 8563 and OU 39437 Age: 25.4. to 24.4 million years ago (late Oligocene, boundary between the Duntroonian and Waitakian stages)

 

Locality: Kokoamu Bluff, North Otago (OU 8563), Duntroon, North Otago (OU 39437) Rock Formation: Kokoamu Greensand (OU 8563), Otekaike Limestone (OU 39437)
Collected by: Andrew Grebneff (OU 39437)
Citation: Henderson 1975. Cenozoic Spatangoid Echinoids from New Zealand. New Zealand Geological Survey Paleontological Bulletin 46.

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