Refine
Document Type
- Article (2)
- Part of Periodical (1)
Has Fulltext
- yes (3)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (3)
Keywords
- Decapoda (1)
- Jurassic (1)
- Solnhofen (1)
- Triassic (1)
- palaeoecology (1)
Die lithologische Abfolge des höheren Malm in Nordwestdeutschland wird mit Hilfe von biostratigraphisch aussagekräftigen Ammonitenfunden datiert und mit der westfranzösischen Gliederung parallelisiert. Die Grenze zwischen der Mutabilis- und der Eudoxus-Zone liegt innerhalb der "Stollenbank". Der "Knollenkalk" mit dem "Yo-Lager" des "Mittel-Kimmeridqe" entspricht basalen Abschnitten der Caletanum-Subzone der Eudoxus-Zone. Die "Ballersteinbank" enthält den "caletanum-Faunenhorizont", eine jüngere Kalkbank innerhalb der "Virgula-Bänke" den "quercynum-Faunenhorizont". Höchstes gesichertes marines Ober-Kimmeridgium (Autissiodorensis-Zone, Irius-Subzone) liegt in Gestalt der sogenannten "Gigas-Schichten" von Holzen/lth vor. An der Porta Westfalica kann hingegen eine Schichtlücke an der Basis der dortigen "Gigas-Schichten" , dem untertithonischen Gravesienkalk, weiter untermauert werden. Die jüngsten mit Ammoniten datierbaren Jura-Schichten lassen sich in den "Gigas-Schichten" am Südrand des Deister nachweisen.
Polychelidan lobsters (Decapoda: Polychelida) are crustaceans with extant species which are restricted to deep water environments. Fossil species, however, used to live in more varied palaeoenvironments, from shallow water to deep water, and were more diverse morphologically. We redescribe two species of polychelidan lobsters, the Late Triassic Rosenfeldia triasica Garassino, Teruzzi & Dalla Vecchia, 1996 and the Late Jurassic Eryon oppeli Woodward, 1866, recently assigned to the same genus, Rosenfeldia, based upon only a few characters. Our investigation of all available material of both species leads us to distinguish these two species and to erect Rogeryon gen. nov. to accommodate Eryon oppeli. The palaeobiology of both species is interpreted for the first time. Rosenfeldia triasica with its stout first pereiopods and mandibles with both incisor and molar processes (documented for the first time in Polychelida) was benthic and probably fed either on slow-moving sedentary preys or was a scavenger. Rogeryon oppeli gen. et comb. nov. was benthic, visually adapted to shallow water palaeoenvironments, and possibly had a diet similar to that of slipper lobsters and horseshoe crabs. The redescription of these two species highlights the palaeobiological diversity of fossil polychelidans.