Basic info Taxonomic history Classification Included Taxa
Morphology Ecology and taphonomy External Literature Search Age range and collections

Ammonoceratites

Cephalopoda - Ammonitida - Lytoceratidae

Taxonomy
Ammonoceratites was named by Bowditch (1822) [Sepkoski's age data: K Apti-u K Albi-u Sepkoski's reference number: 1066]. Its type is Ammonoceratites lamarcki. It is the type genus of Ammonoceratitidae.

It was reranked as Lytoceras (Ammonoceratites) by Collignon (1962); it was synonymized subjectively with Lytoceras by Hoffmann (2010).

It was assigned to Lytoceras by Collignon (1962); to Ammonoceratitidae by Brunnschweiler (1966); to Ammonoidea by Sepkoski (2002); and to Lytoceratinae by Wright et al. (1996) and Hoffmann (2015).

Species lacking formal opinion data

Synonymy list
YearName and author
1822Ammonoceratites Bowditch p. 21
1962Lytoceras (Ammonoceratites) Collignon p. 8
1966Ammonoceratites Brunnschweiler p. 15
1996Ammonoceratites Wright et al. p. 2
2002Ammonoceratites Sepkoski
2015Ammonoceratites Hoffmann pp. 10-12

Is something missing? Join the Paleobiology Database and enter the data

RankNameAuthor
kingdomAnimalia()
Bilateria
EubilateriaAx 1987
Protostomia
Spiralia
superphylumLophotrochozoa
phylumMollusca
classCephalopodaCuvier 1797
RankNameAuthor
subclassAmmonoidea()
orderAmmonitida
suborderAmmonitinaHyatt 1889
superfamilyLytoceratoidea(Neumayr 1875)
familyLytoceratidaeNeumayr 1875
subfamilyLytoceratinaeNeumayr 1875
genusAmmonoceratitesBowditch 1822

If no rank is listed, the taxon is considered an unranked clade in modern classifications. Ranks may be repeated or presented in the wrong order because authors working on different parts of the classification may disagree about how to rank taxa.

G. †Ammonoceratites Bowditch 1822
show all | hide all
Ammonoceratites lamarcki Bowditch 1822
Diagnosis
ReferenceDiagnosis
R. Hoffmann 2015Large, evolute, whorls barely in contact, circular whorl section. Dense, fine, strongly crinkled riblets or growth lines, moderate to high whorl expansion rate; doubtfully distinct from Lytoceras (Kennedy & Klinger, 1978)