Bactroceras sandbergeri ( Barrande, 1867 )

Aubrechtová, Martina, Turek, Vojtěch & Zicha, Ondřej, 2020, Early ontogenetic growth stages of Middle Ordovician orthoceratoid cephalopods from Bohemia, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 65 (3), pp. 575-588 : 577-582

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00721.2020

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0391878B-7A71-FF89-A325-FF7DF2CBEA36

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Bactroceras sandbergeri ( Barrande, 1867 )
status

 

Bactroceras sandbergeri ( Barrande, 1867)

Figs. 2–5 View Fig View Fig , 6A View Fig .

Lectotype: NM L 6584, figured by Barrande (1867, pl. 245, fig. 18), designated and re-figured by Aubrechtová (2015, p. 202, fig. 2A).

Type locality: Osek u Rokycan, central Bohemia, Czech Republic Type horizon: Middle Ordovician, lower–middle Darriwilian Stage, Šárka Formation, Corymbograptus retroflexus Biozone .

Material.— Thirteen internal moulds and counterparts of fragments of juvenile shell parts from the localities Mýto (Svatoštěpánský rybník-Teletník, 49.7863217N, 13.7601539E; MWB S 06761), Mýto (Svatoštěpánský rybník-Kařízek, 49.7959761N 13.7655044E; MWB S 06762), Praha-Hanspaulka (50.1055886 N, 14.3824408 E; NM L 59577), Rokycany-Díly (49.7569444 N, 13.6013889 E; MWB S 06759, 06763), Těškov (49.7945714 N, 13.6958797 E; MWB S 06760, 06764) and Volduchy (49.77091 N, 13.626269 E; MWB S 06823–06828); Šárka Formation , lower and middle Darriwilian Stage, Middle Ordovician; Czech Republic GoogleMaps .

Description.—MWB S 06759 ( Fig. 2A View Fig ) is a part and counterpart of an embryonic portion of the shell with the initial chamber. The total length of the specimen is 2.7 mm. The subspherical initial chamber (= first phragmocone chamber) is bean-shaped in median section, 2.5 mm in diameter and 0.9 mm in length (shape ratio 0.36). The second phragmocone chamber is 2.1 mm in basal diameter and 1.8 mm in length. The diameter of the initial chamber exceeds that of the second phragmocone chamber (constriction ratio 0.84). The phragmocone is circular in cross-section. The marginal (ventral) siphuncle is weathered out and a cavity is left. The cavity appears at about the mid-length of the initial chamber. The caecum is cylindrical, 0.3 mm in diameter; its apical end clearly bends towards the inside of the initial chamber at about its mid-length. The external surface as shown by the latex cast of the counterpart is smooth. The specimen is accompanied by another orthoceratoid shell ornamented with transverse lirae, an indeterminate hyolith, the trilobite Ormathops and the brachiopod Euorthisina sp.

MWB S 06760 ( Fig. 2C View Fig ) is a counterpart of a shell and the third septum of the phragmocone showing the position of the siphuncle. The specimen shows an imprint of the initial chamber. The total length of the specimen is 5.2 mm. The initial chamber (= first phragmocone chamber) was bean-shaped in median section, 2.5 mm in diameter and 1.2 mm in length (shape ratio 0.48). The diameter of the initial chamber exceeds that of the second phragmocone chamber (basal diameter of the second phragmocone chamber was 2.2 mm, constriction ratio 0.88). The phragmocone is circular in cross-section. The specimen is accompanied by the hyolith Bactrotheca teres and other indeterminate invertebrate fragments.

MWB S 06761 ( Fig. 3A View Fig ) is a fragment of a counterpart of a juvenile shell. The total length of the specimen is 13.1 mm. The initial chamber (= first phragmocone chamber) is bean-shaped in median section, 2.2 mm in diameter and 1.1 mm in length (shape ratio 0.5). The diameter of the initial chamber exceeds that of the second phragmocone chamber (basal diameter of the second phragmocone chamber was 2 mm, constriction ratio 0.91). The phragmocone has a maximum diameter of 2.5 mm and expands very slowly (angle of expansion 2°). The phragmocone is circular in cross-section. The external surface is smooth. The specimen is accompanied by a hyolith and other indeterminate invertebrate fragments.

MWB S 06762 ( Fig. 3B View Fig ) is a fragment of a counterpart of a juvenile shell. The total length of the specimen is 20 mm. The initial chamber is bean-shaped in median section, 2.5 mm in diameter and 1.6 mm in length (shape ratio 0.64). The diameter of the initial chamber exceeds that of the second phragmocone chamber (basal diameter of the second phragmocone chamber was 2.3 mm, constriction ratio 0.92). The phragmocone expands very slowly. The phragmocone is circular in cross-section. The external surface is smooth.

MWB S 06763 ( Fig. 3C View Fig ) is a fragment of a counterpart of a juvenile shell with one phragmocone chamber preserved adorally. The total length of the specimen is 10.4 mm. The initial chamber is bean-shaped in median section, 2 mm in dorso-ventral diameter and 1.3 mm in length (shape ratio 0.65). The diameter of the initial chamber exceeds that of the second phragmocone chamber (basal diameter of the second phragmocone chamber is 1.8 mm, constriction ratio 0.9). The phragmocone has a maximum dorso-ventral diameter of 2.3 mm and expands very slowly. The phragmocone is circular in cross-section. The septum of the adoralmost phragmocone chamber displays the submarginal (subventral) siphuncle, which has a circular cross-section and a diameter of 0.25 mm. The external shell surface is smooth. The specimen is accompanied by the bellerophontid Tropidodiscus pusillus , the trilobite Pricyclopyge cf. binodosa and an indeterminate bivalve.

MWB S 06764 ( Fig. 2B View Fig ) is a fragment of a counterpart of a juvenile shell with one phragmocone chamber preserved adorally. The total length of the specimen is 3.5 mm. The initial chamber is bean-shaped in median section, very short, 2.6 mm in dorso-ventral diameter and 1.4 mm in length (shape ratio 0.54). The diameter of the initial chamber exceeds that of the second phragmocone chamber (basal diameter of the second phragmocone chamber was 2.2 mm, constriction ratio 0.85). The phragmocone has a maximum dorso-ventral diameter of 2.2 mm and expands very slowly; it is circular in cross-section. The length of the adoralmost phragmocone chamber is 1.2 mm. The siphuncle is narrow, submarginal (ventral) with a circular cross-section. The external shell surface is smooth. The specimen is accompanied by the bellerophontid Tropidodiscus pusillus .

NM L 59577 ( Fig. 2D View Fig ) is a counterpart of an embryonic shell with the initial chamber. The adoral part of the shell is very slightly bent. The total length of the specimen 4.5 mm. The initial chamber (= first phragmocone chamber) is bean-shaped in median section, 2.0 mm in diameter and 1.2 mm in length (shape ratio 0.6). The diameter of the initial chamber exceeds that of the second phragmocone chamber (basal diameter of the second phragmocone chamber is 1.7 mm, constriction ratio 0.85). The phragmocone is circular in cross-section. No shell ornamentation is discernible. The nodule containing this specimen also yielded the rare graptolite Dichograptus ? leptotheca (Petr Kraft, personal communication 2019).

MWB S 06823 ( Fig. 6A View Fig ) represents the third phragmocone chamber (estimated based on the shell diameter and length of this chamber) and the adapical part of the living chamber. The phragmocone has a minimum dorso-ventral diameter of 1.8 mm, a minimum lateral diameter of 1.6 mm and expands very slowly; it is slightly compressed in cross-section. The length of the third phragmocone chamber is 2.7 mm. The siphuncle is narrow, submarginal (ventral) with a circular cross-section; its diameter at the foramen of the adapical septum is 0.25 mm. The specimen is accompanied by undetermined hyoliths and the bellerophontid Tropidodiscus pusillus .

The three remaining specimens MWB S 06824–06826 from the locality Volduchy are juvenile shell fragments that morphologically correspond to the above described specimens. However, their preservation hinders precise measurements.

Remarks. —MWB S 06759, 06763, and 06764 are shell fragments of larger individuals as indicated by the absence of living chambers. By contrast, specimen MWB S 06823 probably represents the shell of an early juvenile individual. The rest of the specimens (counterparts) do not show any internal structures and therefore can represent both complete shells of freshly hatched individuals, or adapical parts of later growth stages.

The specimens unequivocally belong to Bactroceras sandbergeri ( Barrande, 1867) because they exhibit short, bean-shaped in median section, rather large and constricted initial chambers. These characters correspond in all aspects to the only apex previously known from the species ( Barrande 1868: pl. 247: 26–28; Barrande 1874: 801; see also Dzik 1981 and Aubrechtová 2015). The only difference concerns the caecum, which is slightly more curved in MWB S 06759 than in Barrande’s specimen mentioned above.

In Bactroceras the apicalmost chamber is known also in B. angustisiphonatum ( Rüdiger, 1889) (see Evans 2005), where it is, however, much smaller in size (1.3 mm in height, 1 mm in diameter, shape ratio 1.3), less constricted (constriction ratio 0.95) and more ovoid in shape ( Table 2 and Figs. 4, 5 View Fig ).

Of all known Ordovician orthoceratoids, the shape of the initial chamber of Bactroceras sandbergeri is most sim-

Archigeisonoceras sp. Orthoceras sp. Orthoceratida indet. sp. 1 Arionoceras ? sp.? Isorthoceras sp. Orthoceratida indet sp. Bactroceras angustisiphonatum Orthoceras hudsonicum Orthoceratida indet sp. Bactroceras sandbergeri Orthoceratidae Gen. et. sp. indet Orthoceratida indet sp.

Eriditidae Gen. et sp. indet. Orthoceratidae Gen. et. sp. indet Orthocerida indet.

ilar to that of Orthoceras sp. ( Balashov 1957; Figs. 4, 5 View Fig herein). The latter is, however, much smaller in diameter see Table 2), the caecum is much shorter and the siphuncle has a ventro-central position. Compared to B. sandbergeri , the initial chamber of Archigeisonoceras sp. ( Kröger 2006; Figs. 4, 5 View Fig herein) is smaller and only very slightly constricted; the caecum is bent inwards and relatively long but expands inside the initial chamber.

Stratigraphic and geographic range. —Šárka Formation, lower and middle Darriwilian, Middle Ordovician of central Bohemia, Czech Republic; middle Darriwilian, Middle Ordovician of Wales, United Kingdom; middle and upper Darriwilian, Middle Ordovician, Oslo Region, Norway; upper Darriwilian, Middle Ordovician, Seby Limestone Formation of Öland, Sweden; Grey Lituites Limestone, Folkeslunda Limestone , upper Darriwilian, Middle Ordovician of Mecklenburg, Germany (Pleistocene glacial erratic boulders).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Cephalopoda

Order

Orthocerida

Family

Baltoceratidae

Genus

Bactroceras

Loc

Bactroceras sandbergeri ( Barrande, 1867 )

Aubrechtová, Martina, Turek, Vojtěch & Zicha, Ondřej 2020
2020
Loc

Bactroceras

Holm 1898
1898
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