The Silurian graptolite zonation of China

1984 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 241-257 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen Xu

China is divided into five Silurian stratigraphic regions on the basis of biostratigraphy and lithostratigraphy. These regions are: Zhungar–Xingan region, Northwest China region, Xizang (Tibet) – western Yunnan region, Yangtze region, and the South China region. Twenty-four graptolite zones are now recognized in the Silurian of China. The earliest Silurian graptolite zones include the persculptus, acuminatus, and vesiculosus zones, characterized by an akidograptid–dimorphograptid sub-fauna; these are followed by the cyphus, gregarius, convolutus, and sedgwickii zones, characterized by a rastritid subfauna. The late Early Silurian zones include the turriculatus Zone with a spirograptid subfauna and the crispus, griestoniensis, and spiralis–grandis zones bearing a streptograptid subfauna. The Middle Silurian is characterized by a cyrtograptid subfauna, which is divided into 10 zones known, in ascending order, as the lapworthi, sakmaricus, insectus, centrifugus, murchisoni, riccartonensis, rigidus?, flexilis, ramosus, and lundgreni zones. The Late Silurian is divided into only three graptolite zones, characterized by a pristiograptid subfauna. They are the nilssoni, tumescens, and transgrediens zones.

2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (5) ◽  
pp. 844-862 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhong-Qiang Chen ◽  
G. R. Shi ◽  
Li-Pei Zhan

Four new Early Carboniferous athyridid species in three genera, including one new genus, Bruntonathyris, are described from the Qaidam Basin, northwest China: Lamellosathyris qaidamensis, Bruntonathyris amunikeensis, Bruntonathyris? heijianshanensis, and Lochengia qinghaiensis. Based on the new material and also on published information, we also reviewed the taxonomic composition and the stratigraphic and paleogeographic distributions of the three genera. As a result, Lamellosathyris is considered to be indicative of late Famennian to Viséan age, originating in late Famennian in central North America and Armenia of Russia, respectively. Later, the genus appears to have two migratory directions: one branch rapidly dispersed over Mississippi Valley, Oklahoma, Texas and New Mexico of central North America in Tournaisian; alternatively, another branch from Armenia migrated westerly to Belgium, France, Spain, Britain, Ireland, via the Moscow Basin and Ural seaway, eastward to the Tienshan Mountains and Qaidam Basin of northwest China during the Tournaisian to Viséan, and easterly along the southern shelves of the Paleo-Tethys to Iran and western Yunnan of southwestern China in Tournaisian. Both Bruntonathyris and Lochengia are restrictedly Tournaisian to Viséan in age, and probably originated in the Qaidam Basin. Later, Bruntonathyris migrated easterly to South China and Japan, and westerly to Urals, Moscow Basin, Donetsk Basin and Britain; Lochengia migrated easterly to South China and westerly to the Urals seaway and the adjoined Russian Platform (i.e., both the Moscow and Donetsk Basins).


2010 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 328-341 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luo Chunrong ◽  
Wang Jingfen ◽  
Zhou Zhinong
Keyword(s):  

2014 ◽  
Vol 126 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 119-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kim-Chiu Chow ◽  
Lin Su ◽  
Jimmy C. H. Fung ◽  
Hui Ma ◽  
Alexis K. H. Lau

2018 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 1181-1191
Author(s):  
Connie Ka Yan Ng ◽  
He Xiang Gu ◽  
Tsung Hsien Li ◽  
Ming Bin Ye ◽  
Zhong Rong Xia ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Luo ◽  
Thierry Bourgoin ◽  
Jia-Lin Zhang ◽  
Ji-Nian Feng

Does the distribution of the Hemiptera planthoppers Cixiidae, follow the patterns of biogeogaphical distribution already well established for their host plants or other taxa because they are all obligatory phytophagous taxa? Are their realms and boundaries recognized? What are their zoogeographical regions and usual connections? To investigate these issues, we provide here a referenced and comprehensive checklist of the 253 cixiid species currently reported from China, with their precise distribution at the regional level. Seventy seven of these species are new records for China. In the 8 Chinese main zoogeographical regions usually recognized and 2 adjacent areas, we analyzed further their diversity at the tribal, generic and specific levels using a non-metric multidimensional scaling and an unweighted pairwise group analysis using an arithmetic mean cluster analyses. The observed distribution patterns have shown that an intercalary Sino-Japanese realm is present between the Palaearctic and Oriental realms. At the regional level, the South China region cluster is more closely with the Southwest, Central and North China regions. Taiwan is clearly separated from the South China region and mainland China, but is more closely related to the Qinghai-Tibet region and Indochina countries. The Central and South China regions are close to each other, but the Qinghai-Tibet region is singularly different. An updated checklist of the 253 Cixiidae species currently known to occur in China that composes 10% of the Chinese planthopper fauna, is presented, based on original literature, collections in institutions, and museum records. More than 400 records distributed among the 28 provinces and regions in China are provided including 77 new records for China. More than 80% of the species (205 species, 81.03%) have been only reported from China, and most of them are Chinese endemic species, which reflects the great diversity of the Chinese regional and local biotypes and highlights the uniqueness of this fauna. These species are found in 8 zoogeographical regions in China: The Taiwan region is the most diversified with 161 species and the highest rate of endemic species (70.81%), followed by South China (76 species, 17.11%), Central China (62 species, 35.48%), Southwest China (42 species, 40.48%), North China (29 species, 34.48%), Qinghai-Tibet region (10 species, 20%), Northeast China (8 species, 12.5%), and 5 species found in the Inner Mongolia-Xinjiang region that are not endemic. Thirty eight main distribution patterns were identified, and 9 of them were bi-regionally and tri-regionally distributed. The South China-Taiwan pattern has the highest proportion of these major distribution patterns followed by the Central-South China-Taiwan pattern. Semonini and Pentrastirini tribes are widespread among the 8 Chinese zoological regions, representing, respectively, 20.55% and 17% of all species of Chinese cixiids. Cixiini are the most common species of planthopper composing of 45.85% of the total planthopper species found in China , and they occur in 7 Chinese regions but are absent from northeastern China. The next most common Tribes are: Andini with only 5.14% of these species distributed in the Sino-Japanese - Oriental Region; Eucarpini (6.32%) and Borysthenini (1.98%), which are mainly concentrated in the south of the Qingling Mountain-Huai River. The remaining four tribes, Bennini (0.40%), Brixini (0.79%), Oecleini (1.58%) and Stenophlepsini (0.04%) are relatively rare and restricted to Taiwan. A non-metric multidimensional scaling and an unweighted pairwise group method analysis using arithmetic mean clustering based on the Jaccard similarity coefficient matrix support a Palaearctic/Sino-Japanese boundary and a South China region closer to the Southwest, Central and North China regions. The Taiwan region appears clearly separated from the South China region and to mainland China, but more closely related to the Qinghai-Tibet region and Indochina countries. The Central and South China regions appear close to each other, but the Qinghai-Tibet region is singularly isolated.


2013 ◽  
Vol 21 (8) ◽  
pp. 979-984 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiang ZHANG ◽  
Dian WANG ◽  
Cun-Cang JIANG ◽  
Pan ZHU ◽  
Jing LEI ◽  
...  

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