Volutidae (Mollusca: Gastropoda) of the Lakhra Formation (Earliest Eocene, Sindh, Pakistan): systematics, biostratigraphy and paleobiogeography
Author
Merle, Didier
Author
Pacaud, Jean-Michel
Author
Métais, Grégoire
Author
Bartolini, Annachiara
Author
Lashari, Rafiq A.
Author
Brohi, Imdad A.
Author
Solangi, Sarfraz H.
Author
Marivaux, Laurent
Author
Welcomme, Jean-Loup
text
Zootaxa
2014
3826
1
101
138
journal article
45364
10.11646/zootaxa.3826.1.3
6f4b1535-6c6b-4446-aa26-b1ba83ad9126
1175-5326
228537
53549D58-8F38-47B5-879F-0245E900C131
Lyrischapa sismondai
(d’Archiac & Haime, 1853)
(
Fig. 4
M–N)
Voluta sismondai
d’Archiac & Haime, 1853: 326
, p1. 31, figs. 25.
Voluta sismondai
d’Archiac, 1850: 298
(nomen nudum).
Aulicina pusiola
Cossmann & Pissarro, 1909
: 26
, pl. 2, fig. 34, pl. 3, figs. 4, 5.
Volutoconus corrugatus
Cossmann & Pissarro, 1909
: 28
, pl. 3, figs. 6, 7.
Aulica sismondai
.
Vredenburg 1923
: 267
[new combination].
Aulica (Aulicina) sismondai
. Cotter
in
Vredenburg 1928
: 38
.
Eovasum sismondai
.
Cox 1930
:
186 in
part (pl. 21, figs 1–4), see
Givens (1991)
[new combination].
Eovasum haimei
(misidentification as
Voluta haimei
d’Archiac & Haime, 1853
).
Iqbal 1972
: 64, pl. 17, fig. 8.
Lyrischapa sismondai
.
Givens 1991
: 666, figs 3.9–3.11, 4.1, 4.2, 4.5 (non figs 4.3, 4.6) [new combination].
Material.
1 spm (stn 3:
CPAG
.RAN.
I.9
, cast
MNHN
.F.
A50347
); 1 spm (stn 6:
CPAG
.RAN.
I.10
, cast
MNHN
.F.A50348).
Comments.
In order to avoid confusion with
Lyrischapa haimei
,
Givens (1991)
gave a supplementary description for
L. sismondai
. According to this author,
L. sismondai
exhibits a larger protoconch, a deeper shoulder sinus and its spiral sculpture differs by having threads of uniform size and spacing on the spire, rather than two sizes of threads alternating. The two specimens collected at Jhirak in the Lakhra Formation and at Jamshoro in the Bara Formation are no more than
30–40 mm
in height and have a high spire. They are rather similar to specimens from the Hangu Formation (NHMUK PI G49443, G49444, G49445) and from the Lakhra Formation (NHMUK PI G50319) illustrated in the paper by
Givens (1991)
, but they differ from the largest specimen (NHMUK PI G92737) from the Ypresian (cf.
Wardlaw
et al.
2007
) of the Nammal Formation, Salt Range,
Pakistan
) illustrated by this author (
Givens 1991, figs 4.3, 4.6
). Numerous specimens collected in the Lakhra Dome provide a good ontogenetic series linking juveniles with the largest specimens, such as those figured by
Givens (1991)
and
Cossmann & Pissarro (1909, pl. 2, fig. 30, pl. 8, fig. 2)
. Although they share a large protoconch, these juveniles display many differences from
L. sismondai
. At the same size (H
40 mm
), they exhibit a lower spire and a wider shape, their spiral sculpture is obsolete on the spire and missing on the last whorl, except on the base which bears some fine threads, and their shoulder spines are acute and better developed. Specimens of a larger size and very large specimens of around H
80 mm
have the same characters on their early teleoconch whorls, showing that they belong to the same species, which is described here below as
Lyrischapa vredenburgi
sp. nov.
However, they also demonstrate that the specimens attributed to
L. sismondai
do not correspond to the early stages of growth of the largest specimens often attributed to this species. Thus, the supplementary description by
Givens (1991)
is still a composite description and the character “9–12 prominent spines on the shoulder” should be replaced by: “9–10 short, rounded spines on the shoulder”. By its biconical shape, by the configuration of the shoulder sinus and by its short, rounded shoulder spines,
L sismondai
appears closely related to
Diconomorpha elegans
(
Douvillé, 1929
)
[
type
species of
Diconomorpha
Wenz, 1943
=
Diploconus
Douvillé, 1929
, non Candèze (1860) by original designation] from the Danian of Sindh (Kadhro Formation). Although these Danian specimens do not display the superficial sculpture observed in
L. sismondai
, because they are poorly preserved, they are so similar that, according to
Givens (1991)
, generic distinction seems unjustified.
Stratigraphic range.
Hangu Formation: Hangu Shales (
Cox 1930
); Upper Bara Formation: Jamshoro (this paper); Lakhra Formation: Jhirak (
Cossmann & Pissarro 1909; this paper
).