Bellerophontidae
The Bellerophontidae are an extinct family of specialized globose bellerophontids, Paleozoic and early Triassic mollusks of the class Gastropoda.[2]
Bellerophontidae | |
---|---|
Bucanopsis leda (subfamily Bucanopsinae) | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Gastropoda (?) |
Order: | †Bellerophontida |
Superfamily: | †Bellerophontoidea |
Family: | †Bellerophontidae McCoy, 1852[1] |
Subfamilies and genera | |
see text. |
Geological range
These mollusks appeared in the Late Cambrian and continued until the Early Triassic.
Shell description
The shell resembles a miniature Nautilus, with greatly overlapping, rounded whorls, in which the last whorl completely encompasses the others, leaving either a very narrow umbilicus on either side, or none at all. At the aperture of the shell is a slit, which results in a sort of low ridge that runs along the length of shell. The shell has a low profile and these possibly were active, fast-moving molluscs.
Taxonomy
1960 taxonomy
Knight et al. 1960 in the Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology[3] consider the Bellerophontidae a very large family made up of a number of subfamilies and tribes.
The 1960 classification places the family Bellerophontidae in the order Bellerophontida Ulrich & Scofield, 1897.
The classification presented is:
Order Bellerophontida Ulrich & Scofield, 1897
- Family Bellerophontidae McCoy, 1851
- Subfamily Tropidodiscinae Knight, 1956
- Subfamily Bucaniinae Ulrich & Scofield, 1897
- Tribe Bucaniides Ulrich & Scofield, 1897
- Tribe Salpingostomatides Koken, 1925
- Subfamily Carinaropsinae Ulrich & Scofield, 1897
- Subfamily Pterothecinae Wenz, 1938
- Subfamily Bellerophontinae McCoy, 1851
- Subfamily Knightitinae Knight, 1956
2001 taxonomy
Recently, Peter J. Wagner presented cladograms which divide this assemblage into a number of different groups, as well as combining the Bellerophontidae with the family Sinuitidae.[4] while Bouchet & Rocroi (2005)[2] places Sinuitidae as a family in superfamily Bellerophontoidea.
2005 taxonomy
The taxonomy of the Gastropoda by Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005[2] categorizes Bellerophontidae like this:
- Paleozoic molluscs of uncertain systematic position
- Paleozoic molluscs with isostrophically coiled shells of uncertain position within Mollusca (Gastropoda or Monoplacophora)
- superfamily Bellerophontoidea McCoy, 1852 - Bellerophontoidea is the only superfamily in this taxon.
- family Bellerophontidae McCoy, 1852
- subfamily Bellerophontinae McCoy, 1852 - synonym: Liljevallospiridae Golikov & Starobogatov, 1889
- subfamily Bucanopsinae Wahlman, 1992
- subfamily Cymbulariinae Horný, 1963
- subfamily Knightitinae Knight, 1956
- family Bellerophontidae McCoy, 1852
- superfamily Bellerophontoidea McCoy, 1852 - Bellerophontoidea is the only superfamily in this taxon.
- Paleozoic molluscs with isostrophically coiled shells of uncertain position within Mollusca (Gastropoda or Monoplacophora)
Bouchet & Rocroi, on page 271 (2005),[2] also state that the assignation of "symmetrical univalved mollusks "bellerophonts" either to Gastropoda or to Monoplacophora or Tergomya is controversial." In other words, it is not yet certain whether bellerophonts are in fact real gastropods, they might be monoplacophorans or they might belong to a group (Tergomya) that is closely related to the gastropods, but not actually gastropods.
Genera
Genera in the family Bellerophontidae include:[2]
- subfamily Bellerophontinae
- genus Bellerophon Montfort, 1808 - type genus of the subfamily Bellerophontinae
- subfamily Bucanopsinae
- genus Bucanopsis Ulrich, 1897 - type genus of the subfamily Bucanopsinae
- subfamily Cymbulariinae
- genus Cymbularia Koken, 1896 - type genus of the subfamily Cymbulariinae
- subfamily Knightitinae
- genus Knightites Moore, 1941 - type genus of the subfamily Knightitinae
other genera include:
- Aglaoglypta
- Liljevallospira
- Pharkidonotus
- Prosoptychus
- Ptychobellerophon
- Ptychosphaera
References
- McCoy F. 1852. A synonpsis of the classification of the British Palaeozoic rocks, with a systematic description of the British Palaeozoic fossils in the Geological Museum of the University of Cambridge with figures of the new and imperfectly known species. Parker & Son, London, 661 pp., 25 plates. Bellerophontidae is at page 307.
- Bouchet P. & Rocroi J.-P. (Ed.); Frýda J., Hausdorf B., Ponder W., Valdes A. & Warén A. 2005. Classification and nomenclator of gastropod families. Malacologia: International Journal of Malacology, 47(1-2). ConchBooks: Hackenheim, Germany. ISBN 3-925919-72-4. ISSN 0076-2997. 397 pp. http://www.vliz.be/Vmdcdata/imis2/ref.php?refid=78278
- Knight J. B., Cox L. R., Keen A. M., Batten R. L., Yochelson E. L., & Robertson R. 1960. Systematic descriptions [Archaeogastropoda]. In Moore, R. C. (ed.) Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part I. Mollusca 1, Geological Society of America and Kansas University Press, Colorado and Kansas.
- Wagner P. J. 2001. Gastropod phylogenetics: progress, problems and implications. Journal of Paleontology 75: 1128-1140.
Further reading
- Linsley, R. M. 1978. Locomotion rates and shell form in the gastropoda. Malacologia 17, 193-206
- Moore, R.C., Lalicker, C.G., and Fischer, A. G., (1952), Invertebrate Fossils, McGraw Hill Book Company, New York; 766 pp.
- ----- [no date]. Systematic Paleontology of the Earliest Gastropods (Including Family and Genus Level Stratigraphic Ranges and Synonyms