Goniatites lazarus Korn, Klug, and Mapes, 2005

Klug, Christian, Baets, Kenneth De & Korn, Dieter, 2016, Exploring the limits of morphospace: Ontogeny and ecology of late Viséan ammonoids from the Tafilalt, Morocco, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 61 (1), pp. 1-14 : 3-6

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00220.2015

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10989672

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E087FC-FFC2-FFC9-18FC-FB39FD8DFC50

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Goniatites lazarus Korn, Klug, and Mapes, 2005
status

 

Goniatites lazarus Korn, Klug, and Mapes, 2005 View in CoL

Fig. 2−4 View Fig View Fig View Fig .

Type material: Holotype GPIT 1851–97 View Materials ( Korn et al. 2005: figs. 8.1, 8.2) ; paratypes MB.C. 5307 and MB.C. 5308.

Type locality: 12 km southeast of Dar Kaoua , southeast of Erfoud, eastern Anti –Atlas, Morocco .

Type horizon: Early late Viséan ( Entogonites assemblage).

Material.— 25 juveniles: 6 in PIMUZ 31508 View Materials , 1 in PIMUZ 31509 View Materials , 6 in PIMUZ 31510 View Materials , 2 in PIMUZ 31512 View Materials , 1 in PIMUZ 31520 View Materials , 2 in PIMUZ 31518 View Materials , 7 in PIMUZ 31519 View Materials . 4; adults: MB.C. 25130 , PIMUZ 31514–16 View Materials .

Emended diagnosis (modified after Korn et al. 2005).— Goniatites with an extremely broad spindle-shaped juvenile conch (dm 1.1–6 mm; ww/dm up to 1.76), later with a pachyconic conch up to 40 mm dm (ww/dm 0.70) and thickly discoidal conch at 70–100 mm diameter (ww/dm 0.6–1.00). Umbilicus almost closed (uw/dm 0.01–0.03) in all growth stages. Low aperture, moderate whorl expansion rate (1.7 in juvenile whorls, and nearly 2 near adulthood). The spindle-shaped juvenile whorls carry an umbilical ridge that vanishes at a diameter of about 7 mm. Suture line with V-shaped external lobe with slightly sinuous flanks, moderately high median saddle (one-third of the symmetric, narrowly rounded ventrolateral saddle). Shell ornament with crenulated growth lines with convex course in juvenile to adult whorls.

Description.—At diameters of 2–7 mm, the whorl width/diameter ratio ranges between 1.4 and almost 1.8 (e.g., PIMUZ 31512; Figs. 2–4 View Fig View Fig View Fig ; Table 2 View Table 2 ). This ratio lies between 1.4 and 1 in later ontogeny (dm <70 mm) and further decreases to 0.6 in the still pachyconic adults (PIMUZ 31514, dm 97 mm; Table 2 View Table 2 ). The umbilicus is very narrow throughout the post-hatching ontogeny. Until a diameter of about 7 mm, the spindle-shaped shell carries an umbilical ridge (PIMUZ 31512; Fig. 2A View Fig 3 View Fig ). Adult conchs are globose with rounded venter and very involute (PIMUZ 31514; Fig. 3 View Fig ). Ornamentation is limited to fine growth lines, which are rather straight in small juveniles (e.g., PIMUZ 31520; Fig. 2C 2 View Fig ) and can be slightly crenulated in adults (PIMUZ 31514). In PIMUZ 31515, the crenulation consists of 2 minute waves on the growth lines or lirae, which are spaced at 0.5–0.8 mm at a diameter of 85 mm. The juvenile suture is poorly visible in PIMUZ 31512; its overall course corresponds to the adult suture, but details are not visible in all juvenile specimens. The adult suture (PIMUZ 31514; Fig. 3 View Fig ) was examined at ca. 77 mm diameter. At this size, the V-shaped external lobe is almost twice as high as wide at the mid of its height. The median saddle measures 0.36 of the E-lobe height. The ventrolateral saddle has a nearly isosceles triangle-shape with shallow bulges near the bases and tops of both flanks and gentle concavity in the middle. Its adapertural tip is slightly asymmetrical and narrowly rounded. The adventive lobe is similar in size and shape, except that it is somewhat lower and broader.

Remarks.—The inner whorls of G. lazarus strongly resemble those of Kornia citrus Bockwinkel and Ebbighausen, 2006 . We cut and polished two subadult G. lazarus from the same locality ( Fig. 4A View Fig ), which confirmed that the spindle-shaped juveniles indeed belong to this species and not to Kornia . With a conch width index (ww/dm) of up to 1.8, juveniles of this species belong to the ammonoids with the most extreme whorl width/diameter ratio. Similar changes in conch ontogeny have been documented from several goniatitids including, e.g., G. fimbriatus ( Fig. 4B View Fig ) and K. citrus ( Fig. 4C View Fig ).

Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Early late Viséan, so far only known from the Tafilalt ( Morocco).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Cephalopoda

Order

Ammonoidea

Family

Goniatitidae

Genus

Goniatites

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