Systematic revision and palaeobiology of Rosenfeldia triasica and Rogeryon oppeli gen. et comb. nov. (Eucrustacea, Polychelida)
Author
Audo, Denis
F6374371-1CE6-4B41-8F53-BAA588D4AB5D
UMR CNRS 6118 Géosciences, Université de Rennes I, Campus de Beaulieu, avenue du Général Leclerc, 35042 Rennes cédex, France. & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: F 6374371 - 1 CE 6 - 4 B 41 - 8 F 53 - BAA 588 D 4 AB 5 D & Corresponding author: denis. audo @ edu. mnhn. fr
denis.audo@edu.mnhn.fr
Author
Schweigert, Günter
A8DA7A28-0FFB-4711-AC4E-4ACADE286CD8
Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde, Rosenstein 1, 70191 Stuttgart, Germany. & Email: guenter. schweigert @ smns-bw. de & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: A 8 DA 7 A 28 - 0 FFB- 4711 - AC 4 E- 4 ACADE 286 CD 8
Author
Charbonnier, Sylvain
2B4CC15F-FB7A-4AAF-8CB5-365E976850FA
UMR CNRS 6118 Géosciences, Université de Rennes I, Campus de Beaulieu, avenue du Général Leclerc, 35042 Rennes cédex, France. & Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle, Centre de Recherche sur la Paléobiodiversité et les Paléoenvironnements (CR 2 P, UMR 7207), Sorbonne Universités, MNHN, UPMC, CNRS, 57 rue Cuvier F- 75005 Paris, France. & Email: scharbonnier @ mnhn. fr & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: 2 B 4 CC 15 F-FB 7 A- 4 AAF- 8 CB 5 - 365 E 976850 FA
scharbonnier@mnhn.fr
Author
Haug, Joachim T.
820C23C3-2FDD-4D0A-B1F0-C4C72F4661CE
LMU Munich, Department of Biology II and GeoBio-Center, Grosshaderner Strasse 2, 82152 Martinsried-Planegg, Germany. & Email: joachim. haug @ palaeo-evo-devo. info & urn: lsid: zoobank. org: author: 820 C 23 C 3 - 2 FDD- 4 D 0 A-B 1 F 0 - C 4 C 72 F 4661 CE
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2017
2017-11-16
367
1
23
journal article
21956
10.5852/ejt.2017.367
f7e92d99-c469-49ed-a44f-fe241e84897b
2118-9773
3838383
B3B69190-3F7D-4361-92D9-7D3C3303ED8B
Genus
Rogeryon
Schweigert & Audo
gen. nov.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
77B95F27-FB43-43C1-9085-88176C919CFF
Eryon
–
Woodward 1866: 500
(
pro parte
:
E. oppeli
);
1881: 529
(
pro parte
:
E. oppeli
);
1911: 307
(
pro parte
:
E. oppeli
).—
Glaessner 1929: 166
(
pro parte
:
E. oppeli
).
Rosenfeldia
–
Schweigert 2004a: 70
(
pro parte
:
R. oppeli
);
2004b: 329
(
pro parte
:
R. oppeli
);
2015: 273
(
pro parte
:
R. oppeli
). —
Schweigert & Frattigiani 2005a: 198
(
pro parte
:
R. oppeli
);
2005b: 328
(
pro parte
:
R. oppeli
). —
Garassino & Schweigert 2006: 30
(
pro parte
:
R. oppeli
). —
Schweitzer
et al.
2010: 43
(
pro parte
:
R. oppeli
). —
Audo
et al.
2016: 13
, figs 1h–k (
pro parte
:
R. oppeli
).
Type
species
Eryon oppeli
Woodward, 1866
.
Included species
Rogeryon oppeli
gen. et comb. nov.
Diagnosis
Extremely thin exoskeleton; ovoid, slightly pear-shaped cephalothorax longer than wide, wider in its anterior half; very narrow frontal margin; small, shallow cervical and postcervical incisions; cervical groove strongly marked near cervical incision and near lateral margin, shallower between these two areas; postcervical groove strongly marked from postcervical incision toward median line, longer than ⅓ of carapace width; telson and uropods rounded; eyes with hexagonal ommatidia; median margin of third maxilliped ischium with a few proximal large teeth and numerous more distal small teeth (serrated aspect), first pereiopods about as large as succeeding ones.
Etymology
Dedicated to Roger Frattigiani, an enthusiast amateur fossil collector who co-operates with researchers since several years. Gender of the genus is masculine.
Remarks
Rogeryon
gen. nov.
is represented by a single, very rare species:
Eryon oppeli
Woodward, 1866
, from the Late Jurassic of
Germany
. The study of this species is complicated due to the preservation of many specimens: (1) the
holotype
does not preserve its carapace, but can fortunately be reliably associated with other specimens by the peculiar shape of tail fan and pereiopods; (2) most known specimens have a very thin carapace that was variably deformed; (3) some specimens (SMNS 66004/2, SMNS 70102), whose carapaces are divided across median line, probably correspond to exuvia (see
Audo 2016
). We remark that the thinness of the carapace is unlikely directly linked to the preservation of exuviae in the case of some specimens. Exuviae occur abundantly in Solnhofen-type outcrops (
Schweigert 2007a
), but in polychelidans they do not present a particularly thin carapace, not as thin as that of
E. oppeli
or
Knebelia bilobata
(Münster, 1839)
(see
Audo
et al.
2014b
).
Since its first description, this species has never been studied in detail.
Schweigert (2004a
,
2004b
),
Schweigert & Frattigiani (2005a
,
2005b
) and finally
Garassino & Schweigert (2006)
questioned the original generic assignment to
Eryon
Desmarest, 1817
and proposed an assignment to
Rosenfeldia
based upon the denticulate margins of s4–s6, uropodal exopod and endopod and telson. Unfortunately, these characters cannot be considered as typical of
Rosenfeldia
since they occur in several other species of polychelidans. Indeed, a telson with spiny margins occurs in
Coleia boboi
Garassino & Gironi, 2006
,
Proeryon hartmanni
(Meyer, 1836)
,
Coleia barrovensis
M’Coy, 1849
,
Proeryon giganteus
(Van Straelen, 1923)
,
Palaeopentacheles roettenbacheri
(Münster, 1839)
and
Tethyseryon campanicus
Bravi, Garassino, Bartiromo, Audo, Charbonnier, Schweigert, Thévenard & Longobardi, 2014
. A spiny uropodal endopod occurs also in
Proeryon giganteus
(Van Straelen, 1923)
,
Proeryon hartmanni
and
Palaeopentacheles roettenbacheri
; a similar uropodal exopod occurs in
Proeryon hartmanni
(with a diaeresis in this latter case). Actually, all these margins are often fringed with small spines and setae in extant species; indeed, these structures increase the surface of the telson and uropods. We therefore consider these characters to be only marginally informative.
Rosenfeldia triasica
and
Eryon oppeli
also share a rounded telson, but this character, although rarer, also occurs in
Tetrachela raiblana
(Bronn, 1858)
. The rounded telson may therefore be a convergence between these three taxa.
Moreover, the redescription of
Eryon oppeli
allows the recognition of several characters almost unique to this species among other polychelidans: (1) an extremely thin exoskeleton, reminiscent of the thinness of the exoskeleton of
Knebelia bilobata
,
K. schuberti
(Meyer, 1836)
and that of some extant species, but unlike that of other fossil species, which are distinctly thicker; (2) an ovoid, almost pear-shaped exoskeleton wider in its anterior half, distinct from other polychelidans (clearly ovoid, subcircular or pear-shaped, larger in posterior half in almost all other species); (3) a rounded telson, as in
Rosenfeldia
, rare in polychelidans (generally triangular); (4) a first pereiopod about as large as succeeding ones, generally larger in other polychelidans, except in the poorly preserved
Wrangelleryon perrates
Feldmann, Schweitzer & Haggart, 2013
; (5) finally, as indicated by
Audo
et al.
(2016)
,
Eryon oppeli
possesses hexagonal ommatidia, contrary to all other polychelidans, for which preserved quadratic ommatidia were documented. Considering only these points,
E. oppeli
could resemble
W. perrates
, but these two species do not seem to be closely related as they differ in many aspects:
W. perrates
is narrower, has petaloid uropodal endopod and exopod, and its P5 is larger in proportion. Their resemblance is therefore superficial and possibly linked to similar constrains on the shape of their pereiopods.
For these reasons, we consider that
Eryon oppeli
cannot be ascribed to any currently described genera of
Polychelida
and we propose the erection of
Rogeryon
to accommodate it.
The familial assignment of
Rogeryon
is not straightforward. Indeed, its morphology is very different from all other polychelidans. Its relatively wide carapace and the lack of a diaeresis on uropodal exopod could suggest an assignment to
Eryonidae
; however, both these characters occur regularly within polychelidans. Furthermore, its hemicircular Mxp3 is clearly different from the subtriangular one of
Eryonidae
(and narrow one of
Polychelidae
).
Rogeryon
bears some resemblance to the older
Adamanteryon
Audo, Schweigert, Saint Martin & Charbonnier, 2014
(uncertain
Polychelida
family): both have a very thin carapace marked by strong cervical and postcervical grooves, shallow cervical and postcervical incisions and a carapace wider in its anterior half. Nevertheless,
Adamanteryon
distinctly differs from
Rogeryon
by its slender P1 far longer than P2–P4 and a much broader, more angular carapace. In our current state of knowledge it is, therefore, impossible to assign
Rogeryon
to an existing family of
Polychelida
, and describing a new family would only complicate the systematics of polychelidan lobsters (which already comprise two monogeneric and monospecific families: the
Tetrachelidae
and the
Palaeopentachelidae
Ahyong, 2009
).