Ptygmatis? ursicina (Thurmann, 1861 in Thurmann and Etallon 1861-1864)

Gruendel, Joachim, Keupp, Helmut, Lang, Fritz & Nuetzel, Alexander, 2022, Late Jurassic (Upper Kimmeridgian) Heterobranchia (Gastropoda) of the coral-facies of Saal near Kelheim and the viciniy of Nattheim (Germany), Zitteliana 96, pp. 179-221 : 179

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zitteliana.96.e84187

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:35B61908-6E65-48B0-9A17-7281C2253391

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/36055E12-A8B9-5738-BB92-7475F5DAE368

treatment provided by

Zitteliana by Pensoft

scientific name

Ptygmatis? ursicina (Thurmann, 1861 in Thurmann and Etallon 1861-1864)
status

 

Ptygmatis? ursicina (Thurmann, 1861 in Thurmann and Etallon 1861-1864)

Plate 12: figs 5-7 View Plate 12

?1844 - Nerinea visurgis Röm. - Goldfuss: 44, pl. 176, fig. 6.

1852 - Nerinea visurgis Roemer, 1836 - d’Orbigny: 122, pl. 268, figs 5-7.

*1861-1864 - Nerinea ursicina Th. - Thurmann and Étallon: 103, pl. 8, fig. 50.

?1872 - Nerinea pseudospeciosa P. de Loriol, 1871 - Loriol, Royer and Tombeck: 89, pl. 6, fig. 7.

1889 - Nerinea ursicina Thurmann - Loriol and Koby: 37, pl. 6, figs 1-8.

1898 - Nerinea ursicinensis Thurmann - Cossmann: 37, pl. 3, figs 11, 12.

1927 - Nerinea ursicinensis Thurmann - Maire: 142, pl. 7, figs 15, 16.

1997 - Cossmannea (Eunerinea) ursicina (Thurmann, 1861) - Fischer and Weber: 40, pl. 9, fig. 2.

Material.

Nineteen juvenile specimens from Saal (collection Lang), of which two are illustrated (SNSB-BSPG 2021 XV 30, 31).

Description.

The largest specimen from Saal is 9 mm high. The shell is slender to very slender. The whorls are regularly increasing in width. The whorl face is concave, with a strong, sometimes ramp-like bulge. The bulge is formed at the suture by both whorls. The suture is situated somewhat above the middle of the bulge. The whorl face between the bulges is initially ornamented with one spiral cord, later whorls with 4-5 spiral cords: two of these spiral cords may be stronger than the others. The bulges and stronger spiral cords are possibly nodular (unclear due to preservation). The base is flat, with an almost rectangular transition to the whorl face. The transition has a strong, protruding bulge that is largely covered by the following whorls of the spire. The base is densely covered with weak spiral cords. The aperture has an approximately rectangular outline and distinct oblique siphonal canal. The aperture has a single parietal plait, two columellar plaits, and a palatal plait.

Remarks.

The identity of the present juvenile shells with much larger growing taxa is uncertain (see synonymy list). Thurmann in Thurmann and Étallon (1861-1864) reported that Nerinea ursicina has distinct knobs on the bulges and partly also on the spiral cords between the bulges. Such a knobby ornament could not be substantiated for the present material, due perhaps to preservation.

Relationships.

Differences to Ptygmatis? polyspira (Quenstedt, 1881-1884) are herein discussed in the treatment of this taxon. Nerinea subscalaris Münster in Goldfuss (1844) has higher whorls in relation to whorl width and it has more oblique sutures. Nerinea? lafayettensis Imlay, 1945 has, among other differences, only two spiral cords between the bulges. Nerinea speciosa Voltz sensu Maire (1927) has a broader shell with lower whorls and its bulges are not as much protruding. Nerinea mariae d’Orbigny sensu Cossmann (1898) is slenderer and has higher whorls.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Family

Ptygmatididae

Genus

Ptygmatis