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Commensal anomiid bivalves on Late Cretaceous heteromorph ammonites from south‐west Japan
Authors:Akihiro Misaki  Haruyoshi Maeda  Taro Kumagae  Masahiro Ichida
Institution:1. Kitakyushu Museum of Natural History and Human History, , Yahatahigashi‐ku, Kitakyushu, 805‐0071 Japan;2. The Kyushu University Museum, Kyushu University, , Higashi‐ku, Fukuoka, 812‐8581 Japan;3. Technical Division, Technical Planning and Coordination Department, Japan Petroleum Exploration Co., Ltd., , Chiyoda‐ku, Tokyo, 100‐0005 Japan;4. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Kyoto University, , Sakyo‐ku, Kyoto, 606‐8502 Japan
Abstract:The heteromorph ammonite Pravitoceras sigmoidale from the Upper Cretaceous Seidan Formation (Izumi Group) in south‐west Japan is frequently encrusted by sessile anomiid bivalves. Fossils of P. sigmoidale with anomiids are often concentrated at the top of or just above turbidite sandstones. Projecting retroversal hooks and apertures of P. sigmoidale are usually intact, and some individuals are associated with jaw apparatuses near apertures. Anomiids are found on both sides and ventral peripheries of P. sigmoidale conchs, attached predominantly to body chambers. These modes of occurrence suggest that the encrustation by anomiids occurred not on post‐mortem floating or sunken carcasses but on live conchs and that these organisms were rapidly buried by turbidity current deposits shortly after death. Attachment to both flanks and ventral peripheries of the retroversal hooks may indicate that at least adult individuals of P. sigmoidale did not lie on the sea floor and did not drag their body chambers. It is suggested that fully mature individuals of this ammonite species lived for a long period of time after having formed the retroversal hook because a few generations of anomiids have colonized a single body chamber. Such colonization by anomiids is also observed on Didymoceras awajiense, which is considered to be the closely related ancestral species of P. sigmoidale. This anomiid–heteromorph ammonite commensal relationship might continue to persist in descendants during the course of evolution of these heteromorph ammonites.
Keywords:anomiidae  Campanian     Didymoceras awajiense     Izumi Group  Nostoceratidae     Pravitoceras sigmoidale   
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