Coronula Lamarck, 1802
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.6620/ZS.2018.57-54 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3C9D0C5B-1428-4970-9CB9-C90811E8419C |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.12859695 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/CE206D63-765F-FF9C-FE85-2555FBDEFCFF |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Coronula Lamarck, 1802 |
status |
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Coronula Lamarck, 1802 View in CoL
Diagnosis: Shell comprising six compartments of equal size, walls thin, deeply folded, with folds forming cavities, open basally; radii wide; body chamber relatively small, cup-shaped; opercular valves, paired terga and scuta, diminished in size, not articulated, together much smaller than the orifice; orifice of body chamber wider than basal opening; basis membranous. Attached to whales.
Remarks: The number of species in Coronula is now somewhat reduced from the seven listed in Newman and Ross (1976). Of the three in Darwin’s 1854a monographs, only Coronula diadema ( Linnaeus, 1767) and Coronula reginae Darwin, 1854a remain. Coronula balaenaris ( Gmelin, 1791) has been assigned to Cetopirus complanatus ( Mörch, 1853) , and Coronula barbara Darwin, 1854a , is now regarded as Coronula bifida - a possibility that was contemplated by Darwin himself - see Darwin 1854a: 40 ( Menesini 1968). Species proposed since Darwin include Coronula ficarazzensis De Gregorio, 1895 - now likely to be Cetopirus ( Collareta et al. 2018a: 13) , Coronula dormitor Pilsbry & Olsson, 1951 , is Coronula bifida , and Coronula macsotayi Weisbord, 1971 , is now considered Coronula diadema ( Bianucci et al. 2006a b). This leaves two taxa from the antipodes, both fossil, and both defined by isolated plates: Coronula aotea Fleming, 1959 and Coronula intermedia Buckeridge, 1983 . Both of these species are likely to have had a lower profile shell than Coronula bifida or Coronula diadema , to lie somewhat intermediate between these and C. reginae , or perhaps Cetopirus . Even with these later additions, only five species (i.e. † C. aotea , † C. bifida , C. diadema , † C. intermedia , and C. reginae ) are currently assigned to Coronula . Those with † are known only as fossil, C. diadema has a record from Pliocene to Recent.
Distribution: Cosmopolitan, on whales. Pliocene to Recent.
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