scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Soft-tissue imprints in fossil and Recent cephalopod septa and septum formation

Christian Klug, +3 more
- 01 Dec 2008 - 
- Vol. 41, Iss: 4, pp 477-492
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
It is suggested that newly formed, not yet mineralized (or only slightly), septa were more tightly stayed between the more numerous lobes and saddles in more strongly folded septa of more derived ammonoids and that the higher tension in these septa did not permit soft-parts to leave imprints on the organic preseptum.
Abstract
Several soft-tissue imprints and attachment sites have been discovered on the inside of the shell wall and on the apertural side of the septum of various fossil and Recent ectocochleate cephalopods. In addition to the scars of the cephalic retractors, steinkerns of the body chambers of bactritoids and some ammonoids from the Moroccan and the German Emsian (Early Devonian) display various kinds of striations; some of these striations are restricted to the mural part of the septum, some start at the suture and terminate at the anterior limit of the annular elevation. Several of these features were also discovered in specimens of Mesozoic and Recent nautilids. These structures are here interpreted as imprints of muscle fibre bundles of the posterior and especially the septal mantle, blood vessels as well as the septal furrow. Most of these structures were not found in ammonoids younger than Middle Devonian. We suggest that newly formed, not yet mineralized (or only slightly), septa were more tightly stayed between the more numerous lobes and saddles in more strongly folded septa of more derived ammonoids and that the higher tension in these septa did not permit soft-parts to leave imprints on the organic preseptum. It is conceivable that this permitted more derived ammonoids to replace the chamber liquid faster by gas and consequently, new chambers could be used earlier than in other ectocochleate cephalopods, perhaps this process began even prior to mineralization. This would have allowed faster growth rates in derived ammonoids.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The Devonian nekton revolution

TL;DR: Klug et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the timing of the occupation of the water column in the Palaeozoic and test the hypothesis that ecological escalation led to fundamental evolutionary changes in the mid-Palaeo-Phanerozoic marine water column.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parallel evolution controlled by adaptation and covariation in ammonoid cephalopods

TL;DR: The morphological evolution of these two Devonian ammonoid lineages follows a near parallel evolutionary path for some important shell characters during several million years and through their phylogeny, providing evidence that parallel evolution can be driven simultaneously by different factors such as covariation (constructional constraints) and adaptation (natural selection).
Journal ArticleDOI

Devonian Pearls and Ammonoid-Endoparasite Co-Evolution

TL;DR: It appears likely that the parasites underwent a co-evolution with the ammonoids, which lasted 10 to 15 Ma, and tubes inside the pearls, pearl arrangement, are interpreted as traces of parasitoses, which would extend the fossil record of parasitic trematodes into the Early Devonian.
Book ChapterDOI

Mature Modifications and Sexual Dimorphism

TL;DR: Most ammonoids display a distinctly different morphology when they are adults or subadults, and depending on the taxon, these mature modifications may comprise changes in coiling, changes in ornamentation, and conspicuous changes of the terminal aperture.
Book ChapterDOI

Describing Ammonoid Conchs

TL;DR: This chapter provides a guideline on how to describe ammonoids in a manner that is intelligible to the majority of the fellow cephalopod-workers and lists the most important terms and describes how to quantify and how to properly use them.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

On the buoyancy of the pearly nautilus

TL;DR: In an adult animal the center of buoyancy was found to be about 6 mm above the centre of gravity, which made the animal very stable in its natural swimming position, a couple of about 350 g. cm being required to turn it through 90°.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strength of concave septa and depth limits of fossil cephalopods

TL;DR: Westermann et al. as mentioned in this paper measured the tensile strength of concave septa in the shells of all Endocer-oidea, Actinoceroidea and Bactritoidea.
Book ChapterDOI

Floatation Mechanisms in Modern and Fossil Cephalopods

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the floatation mechanisms in modern and fossil cephalopods with chambered shells and compares the buoyancy of different animals by expressing their weights in sea water as percentages of their weight in air.
Journal ArticleDOI

Septal complexity in ammonoid cephalopods increased mechanical risk and limited depth

TL;DR: It is suggested that while more complexly sutured ammonoids were limited to shallower habitats, the accompanying more complex septal topograhies enhanced buoyancy regulation (chamber emptying and refilling), through increased surface tension effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Model for origin, function and fabrication of fluted cephalopod septa

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assume that the ammonite septum evolved transverse pillars by meridional fluting in order to support flat and therefore weak areas of the shell wall.