Podrobný výpis o publikaci
2014
Revision of the Oligocene bryozoan taxa described by Stoliczka (1862), with the description of a new genus of Bryocryptellidae.
ZÁGORŠEK, Kamil a Dennis GORDONZákladní údaje
Originální název
Revision of the Oligocene bryozoan taxa described by Stoliczka (1862), with the description of a new genus of Bryocryptellidae.
Autoři
ZÁGORŠEK, Kamil (203 Česká republika, garant, domácí) a Dennis GORDON (554 Nový Zéland)
Vydání
Geodiversitas, 2014, 1638-9395
Další údaje
Jazyk
angličtina
Typ výsledku
Článek v odborném periodiku
Obor
10500 1.5. Earth and related environmental sciences
Stát vydavatele
Francie
Utajení
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Kód RIV
RIV/46747885:24510/14:#0001099
Organizace
Fakulta přírodovědně-humanitní a pedagogická – Technická univerzita v Liberci – Repozitář
UT WoS
000346967500003
Klíčová slova anglicky
Bryozoa; Oligocene; Germany; lectotypification; new genus; new combinations
Změněno: 26. 3. 2015 15:03, Kamil Zágoršek
Anotace
V originále
A collection of bryozoans from the Oligocene of Latdorf, Germany, first described by Ferdinand Stoliczka in 1862 and not examined since, has been reexamined. Stoliczka had recognized 47 species, 24 of them new. Of these latter, 14 names remain valid; the remainder are synonyms of previously described taxa or, owing to the originally inadequate state of the fossil material examined, taxonomically indeterminable. e genera Orbitulipora Stoliczka, 1862 and Stichoporina Stoliczka, 1862, both introduced by Stoliczka in 1862 along with their type species, are still valid. Two of his species, one of which had not been examined since its first description, comprise a new bryocryptellid genus, Stoliczkella n. gen., which superficially resembles the celleporid genus Galeopsis Jullien & Calvet, 1903. Diagnoses or descriptions are provided herein for all of the taxa in the collection and lectotypes selected. e results of this revision will be applied to a forthcoming analysis of a recent extended excavation of the Latdorf section by the University of Leipzig, in which bryozoans are among the most abundant fossil groups.