Eolaxoporus, Thuy, 2013
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2013.48 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E7080722-E348-448D-96E5-D537F4865BB5 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3844343 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/99789763-6540-856E-D388-24BEFD1A9AF8 |
treatment provided by |
Carolina |
scientific name |
Eolaxoporus |
status |
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Eolaxoporus sp.
Fig. 6 View Fig : 1
Material examined
MHI 2083/1 (dissociated LAP) from the uppermost Anisian (middle Triassic) Trochitenkalk of Oberscheffach, Germany.
Description
MHI 2083/1 is a dissociated, very small, median LAP of near-rectangular outline; approximately 1.5 times wider than high; dorsal edge concave as a result of a well-developed constriction; distal edge slightly convex; ventro-distal tip of LAP slightly protruding; proximal edge concave, too poorly preserved for spurs to be discernible; no conspicuous ornamentation seen on outer surface; mesh size of stereom on outer surface unknown. Four large, ear-shaped spine articulations on slightly elevated distal part of LAP; dorsal and ventral lobes of spine articulations proximally widely separated, horizontally elongate, nearly parallel and slightly arched concentrically; slight dorsalward increase in the size of the spine articulations. Ventral edge of LAP with large, slightly concave tentacle notch.
Inner side of LAP with large, well-defined, bent ridge; dorsal tip of ridge rounded, not widened, pointing dorso-proximalwards; ventral tip of ridge separated from ventral edge of LAP; inner side of distal edge of LAP with two large, poorly defined, slightly prominent spurs, one near the dorso-distal tip and the second near the ventro-distal tip of the LAP.
Remarks
The single LAP described above is poorly preserved. Yet, it is an important specimen since it is unambiguously assignable to Eolaxoporus gen. nov. on account of the general shape of the LAP, the constriction, the highly distinctive shape of the spine articulations and of the ridge on the inner side, and the very large tentacle notch, and thus documents the presence of the genus in strata as old as Anisian. The specimen shows closest similarities to E. hagdorni sp. nov. but its poor preservation precludes any more detailed comparison on the species level.
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