Conilithes

Conilithes
Temporal range: Eocene–Recent
Fossil shell of Conilithes antidiluvianus from Italy
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Mollusca
Class:Gastropoda
Clade:Caenogastropoda
Clade:Hypsogastropoda
Clade:Neogastropoda
Superfamily:Conoidea
Family:Conidae
Genus:Conilithes
Swainson 1840

Conilithes is an extinct genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Conidae, the cone snails.

This genus is known in the fossil record from the Eocene of Italy and New Zealand to the Miocene of United Kingdom (age range: 48.6 to 7.246 million years ago).[1]

Conolithus (Hermannsen, 1846) is an "invalid emendation" of Conilithes (Swainson, 1840), in the terminology introduced in the Copenhagen Decisions on Zoological Nomenclature (London,1953: 43). Conilithes Swainson (spelled Conolithes by Wenz) is a junior homonym of Conilites (Schloth, 1820) (spelled Conolites by Wenz)[2]

Species

  • Conilithes allioni (Michelotti, 1847)[3]
  • Conilithes antidiluvianus (Bruguiére, 1792)[1][4]
  • Conilithes aquitanicus (Mayer, 1858)
  • Conilithes asyli (De Gregorio, 1880)[5]
  • Conilithes brezinae (Hoernes & Auinger, 1879)[6]
  • Conilithes brockenensis (Vella, 1954)[7]
  • Conilithes canaliculatus (Brocchi, 1814)[8]
  • - Conilithes desidiosus (Adams, 1854)[9]
  • Conilithes dujardini (Deshayes, 1845)[10]
  • Conilithes dujardini egerensis (Noszky, 1937)
  • Conilithes dujardini sallomacensis (Peyrot, 1930)
  • Conilithes eichwaldi (Harzhauser & Landau, 2016)[11]
  • Conilithes exaltatus (Eichwald, 1830)
  • Conilithes fracta (Finlay, 1924)
  • Conilithes lyratus (P. Marshall, 1918) [12]
  • Conilithes oliveri (Marwick, 1931)
  • Conilithes parisiensis (Deshayes, 1865) [13]
  • Conilithes pendulus pusillanimis (De Gregorio, 1880)[5]
  • Conilithes rivertonensis (Finlay, 1926)[14]
  • Conilithes sceptophorus (Boettger, 1887)[11]
  • Conilithes suteri (Cossmann, 1918)
  • Conilithes tahuensis (R. S. Allan, 1926)[15]
  • Conilithes wollastoni (Maxwell, 1978)[16]

Notes

The specimen indicated as Conus deperditus by Suter in 1917 was referred to as Conospira suteri by Cossmann in 1918 and as Conospira fracta by Finlay in 1924.[17]

References


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