New and overlooked occurrences of the rarely reported protochelonibiine “turtle” barnacles from the Oligocene and Miocene of Europe

被引:0
作者
Alberto Collareta
Mathias Harzhauser
Michael W. Rasser
机构
[1] Università di Pisa,Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra
[2] Università di Pisa,Museo di Storia Naturale
[3] Natural History Museum Vienna,undefined
[4] Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart,undefined
来源
PalZ | 2022年 / 96卷
关键词
Chelonibiidae; Coronuloidea; Palaeobiogeography; Rupelian; Western Paratethys;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We report on two clustering chelonibiid shells from Rupelian deposits of southwestern Germany. One of these specimens displays a tripartite rostral complex and disparietal radii that indicate the Oligocene species Protochelonibiamelleni, which was known so far from isolated compartments only. A literature review reveals two additional, overlooked records of the rarely reported genus Protochelonibia, coming, respectively, from the Burdigalian of France and the Langhian of Austria. Both these historical finds likely represent the Miocene species Protochelonibiasubmersa. All together, these occurrences support the notion that the protochelonibiines had acquired a broad distribution as early as in Rupelian times, when P.melleni occurred along the proto-Gulf of Mexico and in the Western Paratethys. Both P.melleni and P. submersa grew in form of peltate shells that evoke a superficial adhesion to some kind of quickly moving hosts. The outer wall of the abraded German colony of P. melleni is comprised of pillar-like blocks of shelly material. In other coronuloids, similar yet more prominent septa abut outward to form T-shaped flanges and intervening longitudinal canals that facilitate the grasping of various kinds of penetrable substrates. The diminutive external longitudinal parietal septa of P. melleni are more likely to represent an early stage in the evolution of the coronuloid shell architecture than vestigial structures. New additions to the pre-Pliocene fossil record of Coronuloidea and a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of the turtle and whale barnacles will hopefully clarify this and other crucial aspects of the origin and early evolution of these remarkable forms.
引用
收藏
页码:197 / 206
页数:9
相关论文
共 131 条
[11]  
Lesport J-F(2020)Jumping from turtles to whales: a Pliocene fossil record depicts an ancient dispersal of Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana 516 1-359
[12]  
Londeix L(2021) on mysticetes Integrative Zoology 9 357-314
[13]  
Martin N(2019)A new whale barnacle from the early Pleistocene of Italy suggests an ancient right whale breeding ground in the Mediterranean European Journal of Taxonomy 14 234-324
[14]  
Rocher P(1935) (Zullo, 1982) comb. nov., an archaic barnacle from the lower Oligocene of Mississippi (USA), and its impact on the stratigraphic and geographic distribution of the early coronuloids of Western Tethys Journal of Paleontology 12 205-101
[15]  
Carriol RP(1895)A new chelonibiid from the Miocene of Zanzibar (Eastern Africa) sheds light on the evolution of shell architecture in turtle and whale barnacles (Cirripedia: Coronuloidea) Bollettino della Società Geologica Italiana 50 95-346
[16]  
Chan BKK(1906)The oldest platylepadid turtle barnacle (Cirripedia, Coronuloidea): A new species of Palaeontographica Italica 4 342-824
[17]  
Dreyer N(2011) from the Lower Pleistocene of Italy Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana 13 791-371
[18]  
Gale AS(1989)Ammonium chloride sublimate apparatus The Paleontological Society Special Publication 29 359-253
[19]  
Glenner H(2014)Contribuzione allo studio dei cirripedi fossili d’Italia Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 237 229-442
[20]  
Ewers-Saucedo C(2009)Studi monografici sui cirripedi fossili d’Italia Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 292 425-480