Stockumites intermedius ( Schindewolf, 1923 )

Korn, Dieter & Weyer, Dieter, 2023, The ammonoids from the Gattendorfia Limestone of Oberrödinghausen (Early Carboniferous; Rhenish Mountains, Germany), European Journal of Taxonomy 882, pp. 1-230 : 51-57

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5852/ejt.2023.882.2177

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:67C909E4-C700-4F8D-B8CE-5FD9B2C5D549

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.8187533

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EA5C14-CA3B-8577-FDC7-FCD0FB878673

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Stockumites intermedius ( Schindewolf, 1923 )
status

 

Stockumites intermedius ( Schindewolf, 1923)

Figs 7D View Fig , 31–34 View Fig View Fig View Fig View Fig ; Tables 23–26 View Table 23 View Table 24 View Table 25 View Table 26

Imitoceras intermedium Schindewolf, 1923: 333 , pl. 16 fig. 2, text-fig. 4f.

Imitoceras intermedium – Librovitch 1940: pl. 2 fig. 5a–b. — Vöhringer 1960: 131, pl. 3 figs 2, 7–8, text-fig. 11. — Furnish & Manger 1973: 20, text-fig. 2b, d. — Weyer 1977: 177, text-fig. 2.1. — House 1985: pl. 6.7.29, text-fig. 6.7.14b.

Acutimitoceras intermedium View in CoL – Korn 1984: 75, pl. 3 figs 20–23, text-figs 4e, 5h–I; 1992b: 15, pl. 1 figs 22–27, 30, pl. 2 figs 2–3, 7–9, 15–16, 21–22, 26–27; 1992c: 178, pl. 1 figs 7–11; 1994: 47, text-figs 37a–c, 40c, 41a–e, 44a–c, 45a–c, 47b, 48a–b, 56d–f, 57b–c. — Schönlaub et al. 1992: pl. 4 figs 22–27, 30, pl. 5 figs 2–3, 7–9, 15–16, 21–22, 26–27. — Korn et al. 1994: text-fig. 20b. — Kullmann,2000: text-fig. 4g. — Korn & Klug 2002: 197, text-fig. 173b. — Korn & Weyer 2003: pl. 2 figs 12–13.

Acutimitoceras (Stockumites) intermedium View in CoL – Sprey 2002: 52, text-fig. 17e.

Stockumites intermedius – Korn & Weyer 2023: 20 View Cited Treatment , figs 8–9.

Aganides infracarbonicus – Schmidt 1924: 149, pl. 8 figs 1–2; 1929: 61, pl. 15 fig. 8.

non Imitoceras intermedium – Librovitch 1940: 138, pl. 35 figs 2–3. — Schindewolf 1952: 291, textfigs 4–6. — Balashova 1953: 198, pl. 12 figs 11–20. — Furnish & Manger 1973: 20, pl. 1 figs 11–15.

non Imitoceras (Imitoceras) intermedium – Ruan 1981: 64, pl. 12 figs 1–6, 9–13, 17–28.

non Acutimitoceras intermedium View in CoL – Belka et al. 1999: pl. 5 figs 7–8. — Korn 1999: 166, pl. 2 fig. 8. — Bockwinkel & Ebbighausen 2006: 97, text-figs 13–14. — Ebbighausen & Bockwinkel 2007: 131, text-figs 8f–g, 10, 12a–b. — Korn & Feist 2007: 106, text-fig. 6b–c, h.

non Stockumites intermedius – Becker et al. 2002: pl. 2 figs 13–14.

Diagnosis

Species of Stockumites with a conch reaching 120 mm diameter. Conch at 5 mm dm thinly pachyconic, subinvolute to subevolute (ww/dm ~0.70; uw/dm = 0.20–0.40); at 15 mm dm thinly pachyconic, involute (ww/dm ~0.65; uw/dm ~0.00); at 30 mm dm thinly pachyconic, involute (ww/dm ~0.65; uw/ dm ~0.00). Whorl profile at 30 mm dm weakly depressed (ww/wh = 1.10–1.20); coiling rate moderately high (WER = 1.85–1.95). Venter broadly rounded, umbilical margin very broadly rounded. Growth lines lamellar, wide-standing, with convex or weakly biconvex course. Without constrictions on the shell surface; without internal shell thickenings. Suture line with narrowly lanceolate external lobe and narrowly V-shaped adventive lobe.

Material examined

Lectotype

GERMANY • Upper Franconia, 400 m north-west of Kirchgattendorf ; bed 21 (“ Gattendorfia Limestone ”); Schindewolf 1916 Coll.; illustrated by Schindewolf (1923: pl. 16 fig. 2), ( Librovitch 1940: pl. 2 fig. 5), Korn (1994: text-fig. 56f) and ( Korn & Weyer 2023: fig. 8a); SMF Mbg.3111.

Paralectotypes

GERMANY • 9specimens; Upper Franconia , 400 m north-west of Kirchgattendorf; bed 21 (“ Gattendorfia Limestone ”); Schindewolf 1916 Coll.; SMF Mbg.7563– SMF Mbg.7571.

Additional material

GERMANY • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains, Oberrödinghausen , railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 3e; Vöhringer Coll.; GPIT-PV-64002 • 5 specimens; Rhenish Mountains, Oberrödinghausen , railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 5; Vöhringer Coll.; GPIT-PV-63860, GPIT-PV-63892, GPIT-PV-63993, GPIT-PV-64000, GPIT-PV-64015 • 2 specimens; Rhenish Mountains, Oberrödinghausen , railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 6; Vöhringer Coll.; GPIT- PV-63875, GPIT-PV-63891 • 9 specimens; Rhenish Mountains, Oberrödinghausen , railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 5; Vöhringer Coll.; MB.C.31078.1–9 • 3 specimens; Rhenish Mountains, Oberrödinghausen , railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 6; Vöhringer Coll.; MB.C.31079.1– 3 • 9 specimens; Rhenish Mountains, Oberrödinghausen , railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 5a2; Weyer 1993–1994 Coll.; MB.C.31080.1–9 • 3 specimens; Rhenish Mountains, Oberrödinghausen , railway cutting; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 5b; Weyer 1993–1994 Coll.; MB.C.31081.1–3 • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains, Oberrödinghausen , road cutting; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 5; Korn 1977 Coll.; MB.C.31082 • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains, Oberrödinghausen , road cutting; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 6; Korn 1977 Coll.; MB.C.31083 • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains, Hasselbachtal ; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 77; Weyer 1993–1994 Coll.; MB.C.5248.1 • 1specimen; Rhenish Mountains, Hasselbachtal ; Hangenberg Limestone , bed 80; Weyer 1993–1994 Coll.; MB.C.5249.3 • 1 specimen; Rhenish Mountains, Oese , old quarry; Hangenberg Limestone ; Korn 1977 Coll.; MB.C.31084.

Description

The two specimens GPIT-PV-63993 (52 mm dm; Fig. 31A View Fig ) and GPIT-PV-64015 (34 mm dm; Fig. 31B View Fig ) represent the adult and preadult stages of the species. The former has a thickly discoidal shape (ww/dm = 0.53) with a completely closed umbilicus, strongly convex flanks and a continuously rounded venter. The coiling rate is moderately high (WER = 1.92). The shell surface bears an ornament of weakly biconvex growth lines running backwardly across the flank and form a broad ventral sinus ( Fig. 33D View Fig ; the growth lines appear to be widely lamellar especially on the outer flank.

The smaller specimen GPIT-PV-64015 ( Fig. 31B View Fig ) has similar conch proportions to the previously described specimen, but with a lower coiling rate (WER = 1.82). It shows the suture line, which has a lanceolate external lobe with weakly divergent flanks. The ventrolateral saddle is about twice as wide as the external lobe and broadly rounded. The almost symmetrical, V-shaped adventive lobe has weakly convexly curved flanks ( Fig. 33C View Fig ).

Ten cross sections are available for examination, of which seven show the ontogeny beginning with the initial stage. They all show the characteristic, very broadly rounded umbilical margin and the continuously rounded venter. The main differences between the specimens are in the shape of the inner whorls. These are always subevolute or evolute with a crescent-shaped profile, but this evolute stage varies in length: In the two cross sections of specimens from bed 6 ( Fig. 32A–C View Fig ), only two whorls are widely umbilicate, while in the five specimens from bed 5 ( Figs 33–34 View Fig View Fig ), three or even four whorls are evolute. This means that the maximum uw/dm value reaches ~ 0.40 in the specimens from bed 6, but ~ 0.50 in the specimens from bed 5 ( Figs 32E View Fig , 33E View Fig ). The early ontogenetic, subevolute to evolute stage is followed by a middle stage in which the whorl profile is C-shaped. At about 8 mm conch diameter, the umbilicus begins to close. This process is already completed at a conch diameter of 15–20 mm. At this stage, the whorl profile is already horseshoe-shaped with increasing whorl height.

Remarks

In his monograph on the ammonoids from the Hangenberg Limestone, Vöhringer (1960) grouped specimens of two species under the name “ Imitoceras intermedium ”: (1) specimens from beds 6 and 5, which actually correspond in morphology to the type material of this species from Gattendorf and (2) non-illustrated specimens from beds 3 and 2, which belong to the here newly described species Stockumites voehringeri sp. nov. The latter differs from S. intermedius by the slightly more slender conch and particularly by the presence of internal shell thickenings in the area of the outer flank and venter.

Stockumites intermedius differs from the co-occurring species S. kleinerae by the more slender conch (ww/dm = 0.60–0.65 in S. intermedius , but 0.75–0.80 in S. kleinerae at 30 mm dm). In addition, S. intermedius has lamellar growth lines, which are finer in S. kleinerae and are there also visible because of rhythmic strengthening on the inner surface of the shell, causing fine undulation of the internal mould.

Other species of Stockumites with comparable pachyconic conch are distinguished from S. intermedius by the shell constrictions or internal shell thickenings. A morphologically similar species is S. depressus , but this has more strongly biconvex, fine and narrow-standing growth lines.

SMF

Germany, Frankfurt-am-Main, Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum Senckenberg

SMF

Forschungsinstitut und Natur-Museum Senckenberg

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Cephalopoda

Order

Goniatitida

SubOrder

Tornoceratina

SuperFamily

Prionoceratoidea

Family

Prionoceratidae

SubFamily

Acutimitoceratinae

Genus

Stockumites

Loc

Stockumites intermedius ( Schindewolf, 1923 )

Korn, Dieter & Weyer, Dieter 2023
2023
Loc

Stockumites intermedius

Korn D. & Weyer D. 2023: 20
2023
Loc

Acutimitoceras (Stockumites) intermedium

Sprey A. M. 2002: 52
2002
Loc

Stockumites intermedius

Becker R. T. 2002: 51
2002
Loc

Acutimitoceras intermedium

Ebbighausen V. & Bockwinkel J. 2007: 131
Korn D. & Feist R. 2007: 106
Bockwinkel J. & Ebbighausen V. 2006: 97
Belka 1999: 51
Korn D. 1999: 166
1999
Loc

Acutimitoceras intermedium

Korn D. & Weyer D. 2003: 51
Korn D. & Klug 2002: 197
Kullmann J. 2000: 51
Korn D. 1994: 51
Schonlaub H. P. & Attrep M. & Boeckelmann K. & Dreesen R. & Feist R. & Hahn G. & Klein H. - P. & Korn D. & Kratz R. & Magaritz M. & Schramm J. - M. 1992: 51
Korn D. 1984: 75
1984
Loc

Imitoceras (Imitoceras) intermedium

Ruan Y. 1981: 64
1981
Loc

Imitoceras intermedium

Furnish W. M. & Manger W. L. 1973: 20
Balashova E. A. 1953: 198
Schindewolf O. H. 1952: 291
Librovitch L. S. 1940: 138
1940
Loc

Aganides infracarbonicus

Schmidt H. 1924: 149
1924
Loc

Imitoceras intermedium

Schindewolf O. H. 1923: 333
1923
Loc

Imitoceras intermedium

House M. R. 1985: 51
Furnish W. M. & Manger W. L. 1973: 20
Librovitch 1940
Vöhringer 1960: 131
Weyer 1977: 177
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