Hosholmoceras ovalis, Kröger, 2025

Kröger, Björn, 2025, The Lyckholm acme of cephalopods - Review of the late Katian (Vormsi-Pirgu regional stages) Ordovician cephalopods of Estonia, European Journal of Taxonomy 978, pp. 1-169 : 103-105

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2025.978.2801

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:422E6F06-B4C8-4840-854C-811145D88B32

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14988553

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/93268783-9610-704E-FDC9-FD9CFC76FE1F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Hosholmoceras ovalis
status

gen. et sp. nov.

Hosholmoceras ovalis gen. et sp. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:221233FB-02D1-4F7C-A010-B574D890913D

Figs 37C View Fig , 39E–G

Diagnosis

Elliptically to oval compressed Hosholmoceras gen. nov., with CHI of ca 1.3–1.5, with angle of expansion of up to ca 26°, maximum mature conch size of ca 50 mm, mature body chamber length of ca 30 mm; ornamented with fine, narrowly spaced transverse lirae.

Etymology

The name refers to Hosholm, Vormsi Island, the type locality.

Type material

Holotype

ESTONIA • Vormsi Island, Hosholm shore ( tower locality ); Adila Formation , Pirgu Regional Stage; GIT 840-252 View Materials .

Paratypes

ESTONIA • 3 specs; same data as for holotype; GIT 878-171 View Materials to GIT 878-173 View Materials 11 specs; Vohilaid Island, Vohilaid shore (E); Adila Formation , Pirgu Regional Stage; GIT 878-170 View Materials , GIT 878-174 View Materials to GIT 878-177 View Materials , GIT 878-179 View Materials to GIT 878-184 View Materials .

Description

The holotype is an endogastrically curved, compressed fragment of a phragmocone and body chamber ( Fig. 39G View Fig ). The conch is slightly deformed (compressed). Parts of the outer shell are preserved on the antisiphuncular margin near the adoral end of the specimen. There, it is ornamented with fine transverse lirae of which ca 8 occur per 5 mm where the conch height is 53 mm. In lateral view, the pro-, and antisiphuncular conch margins, respectively, are convex and concave throughout their entire length. The concave side is nearly straight adorally, so that in lateral view the entire specimen has a bulbous shape. The greatest width is near the adoral end of the phragmocone. The greatest rate of expansion occurs in adapical parts of the phragmocone, where it increases in height from 28 mm to 42 mm over a distance of ca 30 mm (angle of expansion = 26°). The length of the preserved part of the body chamber is 20 mm. The conch cross section is rounded elliptical to oval with a slightly narrower margin at the antisphuncular side. At the base of the body chamber the height and width are 52 mm and 34 mm, respectively (CHI = 1.53). At the apical end of the specimen, the height and width are 28 mm and 21 mm, respectively (CHI = 1.33). The sutures are narrowly spaced, ca 2–3 mm apart throughout the entire length of the phragmocone (RCL ca 0.05–0.07). The sutures form wide lateral lobes. Details of the siphuncle and septal necks are preserved at the apical end of the specimen ( Fig. 37C View Fig ). The septal foramen is nearly marginal (ca 1 mm from the conch margin), very small (ca 1 mm in diameter, RSH = 0.04) and the septal necks are cyrtochoanitic. The siphuncular segments are rounded, expanded within the chambers with a width of 4 mm where the chamber length is ca 1.8 mm (SCR = 2.2). Thin bullettes are present.

Three other specimens in the collection (GIT 878-170, GIT 878-181, GIT 878-183) have a maximum conch height of ca 50–52 mm, suggesting that this is the mature size of this species. A nearly complete body chamber is preserved in specimen GIT 878-170 ( Fig. 39E–F View Fig ), it is simple conical, 23 mm long, and has a straight peristome at the antisiphuncular side of the conch.

Remarks

See Remarks on Hosholmoceras triangulatum gen. et sp. nov. (below).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Cephalopoda

SubClass

Multiceratoidea

Order

Discosorida

Family

Cyrtogomphoceratidae

Genus

Hosholmoceras

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF