Siphonotretida is an extinct order of linguliform brachiopods in the class Lingulata. The order is equivalent to the sole superfamily Siphonotretoidea, itself containing the sole family Siphonotretidae. Siphonotretoids were originally named as a superfamily of Acrotretida, before being raised to their own order.[1]
Siphonotretida Temporal range:
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"Schizambon" [sic] perspinosum, a siphonotretid from the Upper Ordovician of Oklahoma | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Brachiopoda |
Class: | Lingulata |
Order: | †SiphonotretidaKuhn, 1949
Superfamily:
†SiphonotretoideaKutorga, 1848
Family:
†SiphonotretidaeKutorga, 1848
Evolution
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Spihonotretids were most abundant in the late Cambrian and Early Ordovician (Furongian to Floian), and were traditionally considered to have gone extinct in the Upper Ordovician ("Ashgill").[1] More recently, new siphonotretids have been described as early as Cambrian Stage 4 (Schizambon)[2][3] and as late as the Ludlow Epoch of the Silurian (Orbaspina).[4][5] Isolated fragments are even known from the Emsian stage of the Lower Devonian.[3] Archaic Cambrian-style siphonotretids such as Schizambon and Helmersenia, with basic forms of ornamentation, populated the shores of Baltica, Laurentia, and Gondwana by the start of the Ordovician. In the late Tremadocian, advanced Ordovician-style spiny siphonotretids spread out from temperate waters around Gondwana and mostly replaced their older relatives.[6][7] Anatomy editSiphonotretids had simple, rounded shells, with an ornamentation of hollow spines[1] or rarely pointed tubercles.[3] The shell is usually ventribiconvex (both valves convex, the ventral valve moreso) and composed of microscopic granules of apatite. The inner surface of the shell tends to be weakly mineralized, so many aspects of the musculature and other soft anatomy are difficult to estimate in most species. Available data supports comparison to the internal structures of lingulids.[1] Siphonotretids may be related to the linguloid families Lingulellotretidae or Dysoristidae.[8] Similar to acrotretides, the pedicle foramen was set at the apex of the ventral valve, though it is often elongated into a tubular groove opening forwards. This groove lies on a triangular extension of the ventral valve, known as a pseudointerarea, which overhangs the dorsal valve. Unlike acrotretides, the adult shell is spinose while the larval shell lacks a pitted texture.[1] The possible siphonotretid Acanthotretella is known from several exceptionally-preserved specimens which reveal lingulid-like traits such as setae, a spirolophous lophophore and U-shaped gut. However, the shell was poorly mineralized and sends out a very long, stalk-like pedicle, which in one specimen was attached to a fragment of algae. Combined with a lightweight shell, the pedicle likely helped to suspend the body above the seabed, an epibenthic lifestyle dissimilar to the infaunal (burrowing) lingulids.[9][2][10] List of genera edit
References edit
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