Gattendorfia corpulenta, Korn & Weyer, 2023
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2023.882.2177 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:67C909E4-C700-4F8D-B8CE-5FD9B2C5D549 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8184463 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/95790C3B-9B58-492E-BFD6-2D1CC0154C0C |
taxon LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:act:95790C3B-9B58-492E-BFD6-2D1CC0154C0C |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Gattendorfia corpulenta |
status |
sp. nov. |
Gattendorfia corpulenta sp. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:95790C3B-9B58-492E-BFD6-2D1CC0154C0C
Figs 77–78 View Fig View Fig ; Tables 75–76 View Table 75 View Table 76
Gattendorfia crassa View in CoL – Schindewolf 1952: 296, pl. 2 fig. 5, text-figs 16–17.
Gattendorfia costata View in CoL – Vöhringer 1960: 152, text-figs 27, 37. — Dzik: 107, text-fig. 28f. — Weyer 1977: 173, pl. 1 figs 1, 7. — Korn 1994: 73, text-figs 66d, 67a. — Korn & Weyer 2003: 100, text-fig. 14h–i.
Diagnosis
Species of Gattendorfia with a conch reaching 70 mm diameter. Conch at 5 mm dm thickly discoidal, evolute (ww/dm ~0.58; uw/dm ~0.50); at 15 mm dm thinly pachyconic, subevolute (ww/dm ~0.70; uw/ dm ~0.40); at 40 mm dm thickly pachyconic, subinvolute (ww/dm ~0.75; uw/dm ~0.25). Whorl profile in the juvenile stage crescent-shaped, at 40 mm dm moderately depressed (ww/wh ~1.65); coiling rate moderately high (WER ~1.85). Venter broadly rounded throughout ontogeny, umbilical margin narrowly rounded in the adult stage. Growth lines fine, wide-standing, with convex course. Weak constrictions on the shell surface and weak internal shell thickenings; sharp, short ribs on the inner flank. Suture line with lanceolate external lobe and V-shaped adventive lobe.
Etymology
From the Latin ‘ corpulenta ’, referring to the stout conch.
Material examined
Holotype
GERMANY • Rhenish Mountains, Oberrödinghausen , railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 3d; Vöhringer Coll.; illustrated in Fig. 77A View Fig ; MB.C.31160.1.
Paratypes
GERMANY • 1specimen; RhenishMountains , Oberrödinghausen,railwaycutting; HangenbergLimestone, bed 3a; Vöhringer Coll.; GPIT-PV-63950 • 2 specimens; Rhenish Mountains , Oberrödinghausen, railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone, bed 3d; Vöhringer Coll.; GPIT-PV-63896, GPIT-PV-63936 • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains , Oberrödinghausen, railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone, bed 3b; Vöhringer Coll.; MB.C.31159 • 3 specimens; Rhenish Mountains , Oberrödinghausen, railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone, bed 3d; Vöhringer Coll.; MB.C.31160.1–3 • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains , Oberrödinghausen, railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone, bed 3e; Vöhringer Coll.; MB.C.31161 • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains , Oberrödinghausen, railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone, loose material; Vöhringer Coll.; MB.C.31162 • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains , Oberrödinghausen, railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone, bed 3d; Korn 1982 Coll.; MB.C.31163 • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains , Oberrödinghausen, railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone, bed 3e; Weyer 1993–1994 Coll.; MB.C.31164 • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains , Hasselbachtal; Hangenberg Limestone, bed 76; Weyer 1993–1994 Coll.; MB.C.5247.4 .
Description
Holotype MB.C.31160.1 is a specimen, which had been sectioned already by Vöhringer, but it has no internal whorls preserved. The specimen has a diameter of 44 mm and is thickly pachyconic and subinvolute (ww/dm = 0.74; uw/dm = 0.24) with a narrowly rounded umbilical margin, a convex umbilical wall and broadly rounded flanks and venter ( Fig. 77A View Fig ). There are fine, sharp ribs on the umbilical margin, spaced 1.5 to 2 mm apart, which extend over a distance of about 8 mm on the flanks. The ribs are directed slightly backwards. A faint constriction is visible, also directed backwards, forming a broad, shallow sinus across the venter.
Paratype MB.C.31164 is a fragment of a specimen of 40 mm conch diameter ( Fig. 77B View Fig ). The conch morphology can only be partially reconstructed, but it apparently differs only slightly from the holotype. Remains of the shell on the inner half of the flank are preserved, showing lamellar growth lines with a backward course. An internal shell thickening also has a posteriorly directed course.
Paratype GPIT-PV-63896 is a sectioned specimen with 27.7 mm diameter of the conch; it allows the study of five whorls ( Fig. 78B View Fig ). The section shows that the conch becomes continuously stouter in the interval between 5 and 27 mm diameter (ww/dm increases from ~0.50 to ~0.85). The whorl profile is very similar in all whorls, only the last half whorl shows a more pronounced subangular umbilical margin. The suture line of this paratype has a lanceolate external lobe with weakly divergent flanks, an inverted U-shaped ventrolateral saddle and an asymmetric adventive lobe with steep ventral and sigmoidally curved dorsal flank ( Fig. 78D View Fig ).
Paratype MB.C.31162 is another sectioned specimen showing the morphological development of the conch geometry of all whorls up to a diameter of 15 mm ( Fig. 78C View Fig ). It complements paratype GPIT- PV-63896; it is remarkable that the whorl profile shows almost no ontogenetic changes.
The diagrams of the ontogenetic trajectories show an inconsistent picture with respect to the cardinal conch parameters ( Fig. 78 View Fig E-G). The ww/dm trajectory is triphasic, with the first phase describing a decrease in the ww/dm ratio from about 0.90 at 1 mm dm to a minimum of ~0.47 at 5 mm dm; the second phase describing an increase to ~0.85 at 27.7 mm dm. The third phase with reduction of the ww/ dm ratio is only visible in specimens over 30 mm in diameter. The uw/dm curve is biphasic and runs diametrically to the ww/dm curve. It shows the highest value of ~0.58 at a diameter of 5 mm. In contrast, the ww/wh trajectory does hardly change between 1 and 27 mm conch diameter and ranges between 1.85 and 2.25. Only with larger specimens over 40 mm diameter does the value decrease to 1.50–1.75. The WER trajectory is monophasic and shows a slow increase from 1.50 at 2 mm diameter to 1.67 at 27 mm dm.
Remarks
Gattendorfia corpulenta sp. nov. differs from most species of the genus by its stout conch form. Gattendorfia corpulenta differs in the narrower umbilicus from G. costata ; at 30 mm dm, the uw/dm ratio is ~ 0.30 in G. corpulenta , but ~ 0.45 in G. costata . A superficially rather similar species is Z. oblita sp. nov., but this has constrictions that are clearly concavo-convex in their course.
Superficially, Zadelsdorfia crassa is also similar, but at a conch diameter of 30 mm more slender (ww/ dm ~0.65) than G. corpulenta (ww/dm ~0.80); Z. crassa does not possess ribs and has a pouched external lobe.
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.
Kingdom |
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Phylum |
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Class |
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Order |
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SubOrder |
Tornoceratina |
SuperFamily |
Prionoceratoidea |
Family |
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SubFamily |
Gattendorfiinae |
Genus |
Gattendorfia corpulenta
Korn, Dieter & Weyer, Dieter 2023 |
Gattendorfia costata
Korn D. & Weyer D. 2003: 100 |
Dzik J. 1997: 107 |
Korn D. 1994: 73 |
Weyer D. 1977: 173 |
Vohringer E. 1960: 152 |
Gattendorfia crassa
Schindewolf O. H. 1952: 296 |