4.4 Article

Correlation of shell and aptychus growth provides insights into the palaeobiology of a scaphitid ammonite

Journal

PALAEONTOLOGY
Volume 64, Issue 2, Pages 225-247

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pala.12519

Keywords

scaphitids; shell; aptychus; ontogeny; palaeobiology; Late Cretaceous

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Centre, Poland [2015/19/B/ST10/02033]

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This study examined natural moulds and co-occurring aptychi of Hoploscaphites constrictus crassus from the upper Maastrichtian of Poland, identifying growth marks for the first time on these specimens to reconstruct the ontogenetic stages of the shell and aptychus. The growth rate of H. c. crassus was found to accelerate rapidly at the beginning of body chamber formation and then decelerate, with a maturity age of five years tentatively estimated. The role of the aptychus as a protective operculum was rejected for H. c. crassus based on significant mismatches in size and shape during ontogeny.
Scaphitids rank among the commonest and best-known Late Cretaceous ammonites, yet many aspects of their palaeobiology are still unresolved. Here, natural moulds and co-occurring aptychi (calcitic coverings of the lower jaw) of Hoploscaphites constrictus crassus from the upper Maastrichtian of Poland are studied. For the first time in a scaphitid ammonite, growth marks are identified on the moulds and aptychi, which enable a reconstruction of the successive ontogenetic stages of the shell and aptychus. These are correlated to each other, allowing us to address two open issues in scaphitid palaeobiology: (1) estimation of individual growth rate and age; and (2) assessment of the aptychus as a possible protective operculum. As far as the growth rate of H. c. crassus is concerned, this accelerated rapidly at the onset of the mature body chamber formation and decelerated shortly before the cessation of growth. The resultant growth curve departs significantly from the generalized growth curve previously proposed for ammonites. In contrast, an age of five years at maturity, tentatively estimated here for H. c. crassus, conforms to the previous estimates for shallow-water ammonites of comparable size. The role of the aptychus as an operculum is rejected for H. c. crassus, based on a significant misfit in size and shape between the aperture and aptychus recorded during ontogeny. These conclusions may probably be extended to closely related members of the European Hoploscaphites constrictus evolutionary lineage and to some other scaphitids with shells similar in size and shape to that of H. c. crassus.

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