Protostylus, Mansuy, 1914

Ketwetsuriya, Chatchalerm, Karapunar, Baran, Charoentitirat, Thasinee & Nützel, Al- Exander, 2020, Middle Permian (Roadian) gastropods from the Khao Khad Formation, Central Thailand: Implications for palaeogeography of the Indochina Terrane, Zootaxa 4766 (1), pp. 1-47 : 38-40

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4766.1.1

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B1B5DA41-5035-4783-8D47-28857B6305AE

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3803805

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B587AB-4F12-1559-FF51-7EE1FF25FD9E

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Protostylus
status

 

Protostylus View in CoL sp.

( Fig. 25 View FIGURE 25 F–H)

Material. Two specimens: ESKU-19- LP 39, 64.

Dimensions (mm): ESKU-19- LP 39: height = c. 16.8; width = 7.8. ESKU-19- LP 64: height = c. 6.9; width = 2.9.

Description. Shell high-spired, slender, consisting of approximately 7 whorls (apex missing); whorls smooth; whorls slightly convex to almost straight, periphery somewhat below mid-whorl; base evenly rounded, convex; anomphalous; sutures shallow but distinct; aperture unknown.

Remarks. These unornamented high-spired shells resemble several Permian Protostylus species e.g. from the Middle Permian Tak Fa Limestone from Thailand ( Ketwetsuriya et al. 2016) but the body-whorl of the present specimens seems to be more inflated. The Japanese Protostylus species from the Middle Permian Akasaka Limestone (Nützel & Nakazawa 2012) are much smaller. Protostylus sp. from the Permian of Ratburi Limestone, Thailand ( Ketwetsuriya et al. 2020) is more slender in shape. The type species, Protostylus lantenoisi Mansuy, 1914 from the Carboniferous of South China (Yunnan) and the specimens illustrated by Batten (1985) from the Permian of Malaysia, differ from the present specimens in being more slender smaller and having lower whorls. The Permian Malaysian species Omphaloptychia paleozoica Batten, 1985 is similar in having high whorls, but it has a moderately high-spired turbiniform shape and a more step-like whorl profile. The studied specimens are also similar to Knightella irregularis ( Longstaff, 1933) but its whorls are somewhat lower and less convex, and it has shallower sutures.

LP

Laboratory of Palaeontology

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