Camponaxis Bandel, 1994
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2012.0052 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/99201644-FFBD-3A59-FCF9-FC08FB12F876 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Camponaxis Bandel, 1994 |
status |
|
Genus Camponaxis Bandel, 1994 View in CoL
Fig. 9H View Fig .
Type species: Cerithium (?) lateplicatum Klipstein, 1843, original designation; Late Triassic , North Italy .
Included species: Cerithium (?) lateplicatum Klipstein, 1843, Late Triassic; Coronaria subcompressa Kittl, 1894 , Late Triassic; Katosira beneckei Kittl, 1894 , Late Triassic; Camponaxis zardiniensis Bandel, Gründel and Maxwell, 2000 , late Early Jurassic–early Middle Jurassic;? Rotfanella costigera Gründel, 2003c , Callovian (?);? Graphis sp. , cf. costigera Gründel, 2003 sensu Gründel 2007b , Pliensbachian;? Iravadia (Pseudonoba) ponderi Kiel and Bandel, 2003 , Late Cretaceous.
Emended diagnosis.—Shell slender; whorls convex; suture deep; protoconch tofanellid; teleoconch ornamented with strong, straight axial and weak to absent spiral ribs; base convex, not demarcated from whorl face.
Remarks.— Rotfanella costigera and Graphis sp. , cf. costigera differ from typical Graphis −species in size, in having fewer but stronger axial ribs which are not or only weakly parasigmoidal, and in lacking a spiral ornament. According to these characters, they are closer to the type species of Camponaxis and they can be considered to represent descendants of this genus. Iravadia (Pseudonoba) ponderi has also a tofanellid protoconch and the ornament of the first teleoconch whorl (the only preserved one) consists exclusively of relatively few, strong, straight axial ribs. According to its shell shape, protoconch morphology, and teleoconch ornament, this species could also represent a species of Camponaxis . Kiel and Bandel (2003) suggested that Iravadia (Pseudonoba) ponderi resembles? Chevallieria sp. sensu Schröder (1995) (= Usedomella schroederi Gründel, 1998 ) and placed this species in the family Iravadiidae (Rissoidea, Caenogastropoda) .
Stratigraphic and geographic range.—Late Triassic to Early– Middle Jurassic boundary; Callovian to Late Cretaceous questionable; North Italy, Poland,? Germany.
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.