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Research Articles

Carboniferous platyceratid gastropods from Western Australia and a possible alternative lifestyle adaptation

Pages 34-44 | Received 16 Apr 2015, Accepted 29 Jul 2015, Published online: 30 Sep 2015
 

Abstract

Cook, A.G. & Jell, P.A., September 2015. Carboniferous platyceratid gastropods from Western Australia and a possible alternative lifestyle adaptation. Alcheringa 40, XX–XX. ISSN 0311-5518

Platyceratid gastropods, common and in many cases abundant as elements of middle Palaeozoic gastropod faunas worldwide, are rare or absent in Australian Devonian faunas. In Australia, the earliest abundant platyceratids occur in the Lower Carboniferous (Tournaisian) echinoderm-rich Septimus Limestone and Enga Sandstone in the Bonaparte Gulf Basin, Western Australia. Four taxa, each with significant morphological plasticity, are recognized. In Platyceras (Platyceras) tubulosus (de Koninck, Citation1883), three rows of long radially arranged spines and common pentameral symmetry of re-entrants on the aperture suggest an alternative possibility that a relationship between echinoderms and platyceratids developed, and that this may be with archaeocidaroids that are commonly preserved with the gastropods. Similarly in the singly spinose Platyceras (Platyceras) emmemmjae sp. nov., re-entrants suggest an echinoderm relationship. It is proposed that an echinoderm–Platyceras relationship possibly developed in Australia only after a suitable echinoid host had evolved allowing an alternative way for a gameto- or coprophagous habit to be exploited fully.

Alex G Cook [[email protected]] and Peter A. Jell [[email protected]], School of Earth Sciences, The University of Queensland, Queensland 4072, Australia.

Acknowledgements

We thank Terry Smith and Alex Nützel for help in the field, Meg Lloyd at the Queensland Museum Library for obtaining literature and Land Rover Australia for supply of a vehicle. M. Amler and T. Baumiller are thanked for helpful suggestions to the manuscript.

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