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  3. A new Early Jurassic gastropod from Ellesmere Island, Canadian Arctic – an ancient example of holoplanktonic gastropods

A new Early Jurassic gastropod from Ellesmere Island, Canadian Arctic – an ancient example of holoplanktonic gastropods

A new, most probably holoplanktonic gastropod genus and species, Freboldia fluitans Nützel & Schneider, is reported from the Early Jurassic (Pliensbachian) of Ellesmere Island, Canadian Arctic. Its shell is very thin, small, with a maximum diameter of 8 mm, inflated, planispiral and almost bilaterally symmetric, with deep umbilici. Hundreds of specimens of Freboldia occur in the matrix of transported siltstone concretions. In summary, these characteristics suggest a holoplanktonic lifestyle for Freboldia. Similar shells are present in the modern holoplanktonic gastropod family Limacinidae and in Cretaceous Bellerophinidae, and the new species is assigned to the latter family. The oldest records of holoplanktonic or pelagic gastropods are represented now by seven Early Jurassic genera: Coelodiscus, Tatediscus, Costasphaera, Pterotrachea, Simoniceras, Globorilusopsis and the new genus Freboldia. These are attributed to five different clades, which made their appearance at approximately the same time. We thus speculate that Early Jurassic anoxia triggered the rapid evolution of the holoplanktonic lifestyle in gastropods.

Publication Details

  • Type

    Journal Article
  • Title

    A new Early Jurassic gastropod from Ellesmere Island, Canadian Arctic – an ancient example of holoplanktonic gastropods
  • Year

    2016
  • Author(s)

    Nützel, A., Schneider, S., Hülse, P., Kelly, S.R.A., Tilley, L. and Veit, R.
  • Journal

    Bulletin of Geosciences
  • Volume

    91
  • Issue

    2
  • Page(s)

    229-242
  • URL

    http://doi.org/10.3140/BULL.GEOSCI.1597
  • People

    • Simon Schneider
    • Simon Kelly

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