Lower Tithonian mono- and dicyrtid Nassellaria (Radiolaria) from the Solnhofen area (southern Germany)
Author
Dumitrica, Paulian
Institut de Géologie et Paléontologie, BFSH 2, UNIL, CH- 1015 Lausanne (Switzerland) Paulian. Dumitrica @ igp. unil. ch
umitrica@igp.unil.ch
Author
Zügel, Peter
Geologisch-Paläontologisches Institut, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Senckenberganlage 32 - 34, D- 60054 Frankfurt am Main (Germany) zuegel @ em. uni-frankfurt. de.
text
Geodiversitas
2003
25
1
5
72
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.5372196
1638-9395
5372196
8BF4D0FF-F247-4B92-B327-0D647B01C386
Genus
Saitoum
Pessagno, 1977
TYPE
SPECIES
. —
Saitoum pagei
Pessagno, 1977
; original designation.
KNOWN RANGE
. — Jurassic-Cretaceous.
REMARKS
For many monocyrtid lower Tithonian species from the material we studied in the present paper it is difficult to establish whether they belong to the genus
Poulpus
or to the genus
Saitoum
. Some of them have the arches Al rather well marked on the surface and sometimes the arch AV is weakly sketched. In other species of comparable morphology, especially when the cephalic wall is thick, these arches are not visible. As De Wever (
in
De Wever
et al
. 1979
) remarked, the members of the genus
Poulpus
are superficially similar to
Saitoum pagei
, the
type
species of the genus
Saitoum
, the only difference is that the genus
Poulpus
has the three arches Al and AV marked as depressions on the surface of the cephalis, whereas
Saitoum
has no arches.
In order to better understand the differences between the two genera we also examined some specimens of
S
.
pagei
from our material and found that this species has also the three arches Al and AV. They are very weak on some segments as compared to those of
Poulpus
and are marked externally by three longitudinal constrictions so that the cephalis of
S
.
pagei
is three-lobate in apical view.
Takemura (1986)
showed also a well marked arch AV in
Saitoum levium
De Wever, 1981
. Therefore
Poulpus
could be considered a junior synonym of
Saitoum
. In order to preserve it we think that a better distinction between the two genera could be the presence or absence of the apical horn: the genus
Poulpus
could be characterized by the absence of the apical horn and
Saitoum
by its presence. In all the three Triassic species initially assigned to
Poulpus
, the
type
species included, the apical horn is absent. Other Triassic species assigned to this genus are also characterized by the absence of the apical horn, or when it is present it looks like a very short thorn.
Saitoum
, on the contrary, has always a rather well developed apical horn. A character common to both genera is also the absence of verticils of spines on feet.
Saitoum
was described without a distal velum. Our well preserved material proves that a velum is almost always present, its absence being due to poor preservation.