Henodus chelyops F. Huene, 1936
|
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.3897/fr.28.164405 |
|
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E2366C87-D1C3-4F5A-A21D-1A7A5D49BB8F |
|
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17823880 |
|
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/177455A3-D4DD-5DF5-B5B6-025A5D266A8A |
|
treatment provided by |
by Pensoft |
|
scientific name |
Henodus chelyops F. Huene, 1936 |
| status |
|
Henodus chelyops F. Huene, 1936
Lectotype.
GPIT-PV -30002 (‘ specimen II’ of F. Huene 1936; Fig. 12 B View Figure 12 ).
Type locality.
Goldersbach near Tübingen-Lustnau, Baden-Württemberg.
Type horizon.
Stuttgart Formation, Middle Keuper Subgroup ( Seegis 2005). Age: Late Triassic (Carnian: Julian-Tuvalian).
Referred material.
‘ Specimens I and III-VIII’ ( GPIT-PV -30001 and GPIT-PV -30003 - GPIT-PV -30008 ) from type locality.
Diagnosis.
Distinguished by the following combination of features: skull broad transversely, flat dorsoventrally, and truncated anteriorly; anterior edges of premaxillae denticulate; maxilla with deep groove but without teeth; palatines separated from each other by broad vomers and pterygoids; palatine with single posterior crushing tooth; supratemporal fenestra small or absent; parietal broad and fan-shaped; dentary with deep groove and single posterior crushing tooth; coronoid forming small coronoid process; carapace shorter anteroposteriorly than wide transversely, distinctly embayed anteriorly and posteriorly, and linked to plastron by lateral wall; dorsomedial row of hexagonal osteoderms underlain by dorsal neural spines; and marginal row of smaller hexagonal osteoderms closely associated with underlying ribs ( Rieppel 2001 a, 2002).
Comments.
Unlike other placodonts, Henodus chelyops lived in a brackish-water lagoonal environment. Rieppel (2012) noted its unusual combination of denticulate premaxillary edges (suitable for scraping), small crushing teeth at the back of the palatines and dentaries, and a well-developed hyoid apparatus (potentially suitable for suction feeding). F. Huene (1936) also observed what he considered traces of what appeared to be baleen-like structures in the mouth. Reif and Stein (1999) interpreted Henodus chelyops as possibly herbivorous, but Pommery et al. (2021) suggested a diet of small crustaceans and snails.
References.
F. Huene (1936, 1938, 1958 a), Reiff (1942), Westphal (1975), Reif and Stein (1999), Rieppel (2001 a, 2002 a), Pommery et al. (2021).
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.
|
Kingdom |
|
|
Phylum |
|
|
Class |
|
|
Order |
|
|
Family |
|
|
Genus |
