Family Julfanautilidae, 2025

Korn, Dieter & Ghaderi, Abbas, 2025, Late Permian nautiloids from Julfa (NW Iran), European Journal of Taxonomy 1018, pp. 1-113 : 98

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2025.1018.3069

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:74A6C5AD-7328-444C-9478-36F290657B6E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17257819

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03D4F01A-FFBB-9E7D-3C64-FEE7FCECE63F

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Family Julfanautilidae
status

fam. nov.

Family Julfanautilidae fam. nov.

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:

new family – Korn 2025: 65, 69, fig. 35.

Type genus

Julfanautilus gen. nov.

Diagnosis

Family of the superfamily Liroceratoidea with a usually pachyconic, subinvolute to involute conch. Whorl profile in the adult stage usually more or less strongly depressed; flanks and venter usually separated by distinct ventrolateral shoulder, venter flattened or concave. Umbilical margin subangular or angular; umbilical wall steep, flattened. Ornament usually consisting of fine growth lines. Septum simple in shape, concavely domed; suture line with shallow lobes on venter and flank.

Etymology

Named after the type genus Julfanautilus gen. nov.

Included genera

Julfanautilus gen. nov. (Permian); new genus E to be described by Korn & Hairapetian (in press) (Permian); new genus F to be described by Korn & Hairapetian (in press) (Permian).

Remarks

The family Julfanautilidae fam. nov. is characterised by a combination of characters not found in any other family of Palaeozoic nautilids. This is the combination of a rather stout conch with a very pronounced umbilical margin and also a sometimes pronounced ventrolateral shoulder. While the first character suggests a placement in the superfamily Liroceratoidea , the second and third characters show a closer morphological relationship to the superfamilies Pleuronautiloidea and Grypoceratoidea . Unfortunately, the early ontogenetic development of the conch in the species of the Julfanautilidae is not known. However, the material shows that the pronounced umbilical margin is present early in ontogeny and that this feature can therefore be considered apomorphic, whereas the ventrolateral shoulder does not assume a subangular shape until a late ontogenetic stage, if at all. Therefore, these forms are included here as a new family of the superfamily Liroceratoidea .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Cephalopoda

SubClass

Nautiloidea

Order

Nautilida

SubOrder

Liroceratina

SuperFamily

Liroceratoidea

Family

Julfanautilidae

Genus

Permonautilus

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