Olegia szokolyensis ( Strausz, 1960 ) Harzhauser & Landau & Janssen, 2022

Harzhauser, Mathias, Landau, Bernard & Janssen, Ronald, 2022, The Clavatulidae (Gastropoda, Conoidea) of the Miocene Paratethys Sea with considerations on fossil and extant Clavatulidae genera, Zootaxa 5123 (1), pp. 1-172 : 87-88

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5123.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:036F6B4D-CDCC-4CD7-A914-9A1D8C7A097A

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10722915

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039487D1-FFD4-FFFF-FFBA-FB686BECFD45

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Olegia szokolyensis ( Strausz, 1960 )
status

comb. nov.

Olegia szokolyensis ( Strausz, 1960) nov. comb.

Figs 24D View FIGURE 24 1 –D View FIGURE 1 2 View FIGURE 2 , 5 View FIGURE 5

* Clavatula schreibersi szokolyensis View in CoL nov. var. — Strausz 1960: 351, pl. 20, figs 2, 5.

Clavatula schreibersi szokolyensis Strausz, 1960 View in CoL — Strausz 1966: 410, pl. 16, figs 9–10, text-fig. 182.

Clavatula (Clavatula) interrupta sophiae (R. Hoernes et M. Auinger, 1879) View in CoL — Švagrovský 1981b: 156, pl. 48, fig. 1 [non ‘Clavatula’ sophiae (Hoernes & Auinger, 1879) View in CoL ]

Type material. Holotype: M.9, Szokolya ( Hungary), SL: 14.5 mm, MD: 5.7 mm, illustrated in Strausz (1960, pl. 20, figs 2, 5), stored in the Geological and Geophysical Institute of Hungary (Budapest), figs 24D 1 –D 2.

Revised description. Shell small, moderately stout fusiform, with weakly gradate conical spire and high last whorl; apical angle 44°. Protoconch not preserved. Teleoconch of at least eight whorls. Early teleoconch whorls flat-sided (strongly abraded) with smooth subsutural spiral cord and strongly beaded suprasutural cord. Later teleoconch whorls with narrow, indistinctly beaded subsutural collar, weakly concave mid-portion bearing axial riblets, suprasutural cord bearing large, rounded tubercles. Suture narrowly incised, undulating, running below abapical row of tubercles. Last whorl ~ 65% of total height, subcylindrical; subsutural collar broad, swollen, bearing 12 large rounded tubercles. Subsutural ramp weakly concave, delimited by tubercular shoulder cord, weakly convex below, weakly constricted at base. Base delimited by weakly tubercular peribasal cord; poorly delimited and developed siphonal fasciole. Sculpture of two tubercular primary spiral cords. Adapical cord delimiting shoulder bearing large low tubercles, second cord at mid-whorl delimiting periphery with smaller tubercles, peribasal and perifasciolar cords not developed; suggestion of several weaker cords over base and fasciole. Aperture moderately wide, pyriform. Outer lip not preserved. Anal sinus moderately deep and wide, asymmetrically U-shaped, with apex mid-ramp. Siphonal canal moderately long. Columella weakly excavated, straight, oblique, smooth. Columellar and parietal callus weakly thickened, adherent, forming narrow pseudumbilical chink.

Discussion. Olegia szokolyensis was established by Strausz (1960) as subspecies of ‘ Clavatula schreibersi ( Hörnes, 1854) , but the absence of spiral sculpture in O. szokolyensis excludes a close relationship between the two species. It is difficult to characterize this species as it is represented by a single, abraded specimen. It differs from all of its congeners in having only the spiral cords at the shoulder and the periphery well developed, bearing large, rounded tubercles, and a weakly developed and subobsoletely tubercular peribasal cord. The perifasciolar cord is not developed. The strong subsutural and peribasal cords make it most similar to O. doderleini ( Hörnes, 1854) , but in that species the mid-whorl portion of the last whorl is more inflated and, as mentioned above, it has a stronger peribasal and a perifasciolar cord developed, the former very weak and the later absent in O. szokolyensis . Apart from these shell differences O. szokolyensis derives from open marine Badenian deposits, whereas O. doderleini is an endemic species of the middle Sarmatian, known from hypersaline environments.

Paleoenvironment. The fauna from Szokolya ( Hungary) corresponds to that of the basinal clays of the Baden Formation in the Vienna Basin, which formed in middle to outer neritic environments (Krenner et al. 2021).

Distribution in Central Paratethys. Badenian (middle Miocene): Pannonian Basin: Szokolya ( Hungary) ( Strausz 1966), Vienna Basin: Devín ( Slovakia) ( Švagrovský 1981b).

MD

Museum Donaueschingen

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Hemiptera

Family

Phylloxeridae

Genus

Olegia

Loc

Olegia szokolyensis ( Strausz, 1960 )

Harzhauser, Mathias, Landau, Bernard & Janssen, Ronald 2022
2022
Loc

Clavatula (Clavatula) interrupta sophiae (R. Hoernes et M. Auinger, 1879)

Svagrovsky, J. 1981: 156
1981
Loc

Clavatula schreibersi szokolyensis

Strausz, L. 1966: 410
1966
Loc

Clavatula schreibersi szokolyensis

Strausz, L. 1960: 351
1960
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