Geologija (Apr 2020)

Well-preserved cuticle of Atherfieldastacus magnus (Decapoda, Glypheida) from the Aptian of Mexico

  • Oscar GONZÁLEZ-LEÓN,
  • Josep A. MORENO-BEDMAR,
  • Ricardo BARRAGÁN-MANZO,
  • Francisco J. VEGA

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5474/geologija.2020.004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 63, no. 1
pp. 39 – 46

Abstract

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The cuticle structure of fossil decapod crustaceans is an important tool, not only for palaeocological and taphonomic interpretations, but also as a potential way to characterise systematically genera and even species the cuticle of which has not been severely altered by diagenetic processes. Localities with abundant decapod crustacean remains can be interpreted either as reflecting mass mortality events or just simple accumulations of exuviae, on the basis of completeness and comparison of cuticle structures between specimens of the same species from different localities. Association with anoxic events by microfacies analyses can offer clues to explain the unusual abundance of decapod crustacean remains. This is the case for the Early Cretaceous lobster Atherfieldastacus magnus (M’Coy, 1849), which is found in large numbers in different Lower Cretaceous (mainly Aptian) lithostratigraphic units across the globe. In this case, we document the well-preserved cuticle structure of specimens from the upper Aptian of Chihuahua (Mexico), preserved three-dimensionally, mainly in concretions, which were studied in different transverse sections showing the cuticle in diverse portions of the lobster body. Thin cuticle layers show the typical crustacean cuticular structure that suggest these are corpses preserved in an anoxic environment

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