Leptoelops rhenanus (Weiler, 1954)
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zitteliana.96.81737 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CD8C70BA-0253-4540-8EFC-D430A12F6B35 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/245CE66E-1631-5C71-AD9C-E36844826675 |
treatment provided by |
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scientific name |
Leptoelops rhenanus (Weiler, 1954) |
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Leptoelops rhenanus (Weiler, 1954)
Plate 3, figs 14-16 View Plate 3
Otolithus rhenanus 1954 Otolithus ( Lycopteridarum ?) Otolithus rhenanus - Weiler: pl. 1, fig. 18.
Otolithus rectisulcatus 1956 Otolithus rectisulcatus - Schröder: pl. 6, fig. 21.
Otolithus scissus ?1956 Otolithus scissus - Schröder: pl. 7, figs 29-30.
Leptoelops rhenanus 2018 Leptoelops rhenanus (Weiler, 1954) - Schwarzhans: fig. 5O.
Material.
5 specimens: Weiler’s holotype of Ot. rhenanus from the Callovian of well Bruchsal D 205 (core from 482 to 487 m) near Weingarten, Baden-Würtemberg (SMF P.2953, refigured in Plate 3 View Plate 3 , fig. 14) ; 4 specimens from Schröder’s collection from the early Callovian of Pünzendorf: holotype of Ot. rectisulcatus (SNSB-BSPG 2022 III 37, Plate 3 View Plate 3 , fig. 15) and 1 paratype (SNSB-BSPG 2022 III 38), holotype of Ot. scissus (SNSB-BSPG 2022 III 40, Plate 3 View Plate 3 , fig. 16) and 1 paratype (SNSB-BSPG 2022 III 41).
Diagnosis
(from Schwarzhans 2018). Thin, elongate otolith with an OL:OH ratio of 2.1. Rostrum about 40% of OL. Ostium dorsally open, its ventral margin level with the ventral margin of its cauda. Outer face with radial furrows near ventral rim.
Discussion.
Leptoelops rhenanus is a very characteristic otolith that differs readily from Leptolepis otoliths in both its very slender shape and its absence of a ventrally widened ostium. Schröder’s holotype of Ot. rectisulcatus lacks the rostrum, but otherwise it largely resembles Weiler’s holotype of L. rhenanus . The specimens of Ot. scissus are also fragmentary, less well-preserved, and much smaller in size. They differ somewhat in the posteriorly elevated dorsal rim and a slight bend in the cauda. We consider these features aspects of an ontogenetical allometry, but we are aware that they could also indicate the presence of another species in the Callovian. We have therefore only tentatively attributed Ot. scissus to L. rhenanus , subject to finding additional and better-preserved specimens in the future.
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