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ARTHROPODS
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Arthropods Most diverse phylum - > 85% of all species
All habitats – esp. extremes Segmented body w jointed appendages Chitin (polysaccharide) exoskeleton good protection requires molting prohibits large size
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Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum Trilobitomorpha – Trilobites (Camb-Perm) Subphylum Chelicerata – Arachnids, Horseshoe crabs, Eurypterids (Ord-R) Subphylum Crustacea – Lobsters, crabs, shrimp, barnacles, ostracodes (Camb–R) Subphylum Tracheata (Unirama) – Insects (Dev–R)
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Trilobites Cranidium = cephalon missing free cheeks
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Sutures Opisthoparian Proparian Gonatoparian underside
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Biramous legs
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A. compound (holochroal) eyes B. schizochroal eyes
Trilobite eyes A. compound (holochroal) eyes B. schizochroal eyes Huygens lens corrects spherical aberration
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Subphylum Trilobitomorpha Class Trilobita Order Agnostida (Camb-O)
Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum Trilobitomorpha Class Trilobita Order Agnostida (Camb-O) Order Redlichiida (Camb) Order Corynexochida (Camb) Order Ptychopariida (Camb-O) Order Asaphida (Camb-O) Order Illaenida (O-D) Order Trinucleida (O-S) Order Harpida (Camb-D) Order Phacopida (O-D) Order Lichida (O-D) Order Odontopleurida (O-D) Order Proetida (Camb-P)
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Agnostid – Peronopsis small, isopygous, 2-3 thoracic segs, most blind Redlichiida – Olenellus & Paradoxides v. primitive, pygidium may not be fused, long genal spines, telson, O. sutures
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Corynexochid – Basidechenella
O. sutures, 7-8 thorax, Ptychoparid – Elrathia diverse, glabella tapers forward, straight g. furrows, many thorax., small pygidium
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Asaphid – Isotelus snowplow shape, 6-9 thorax Illaenid – Illaenus smooth ceph & pyg, isopygous
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Trinulceid – Cryptolithus
small pyg and thorax, broad ornamented ceph brim, long genal spines (burrowing? Pelagic?) Harpid – Harpes broad smooth ceph, eyes on stems, many thoracic segs
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Phacopids – Flexicalymene & Phacops
P sutures, prominent eyes, enroll
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Lichid – Amphilichas glabella to front of ceph, large pyg w 3 pairs spiny pleurae Odontopleurid – Dicranurus spines everywhere
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Proetid – Anisopyge & Kaskia
O. suture, large holochroal eyes, conservative
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Trilobite ontogeny proaspid – A, B meraspid – C,D holaspid - E
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Marine – swimmers, crawlers, burrowers, probably ate detritus
Trilobite Ecology Marine – swimmers, crawlers, burrowers, probably ate detritus Trilobite Evolution Responded to most extinctions, conservative forms, burrowers survive best Late Ordovician extinctions wiped out many groups. Frasnian-Fammenian almost ended them, rare afterwards Good examples of iterative evolution
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Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum Chelicerata Class Merostomata Subclass Eurypterida “Sea Scorpions” – largest known early Paleozoic predators (up to 2.5m) Subclass Xiphosura Horseshoe crabs
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Varied forms compound eyes, telson Name refers to paddle legs swim and walk marine to brackish (fresh?)
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Xiphosurans – “living fossil” Limulus
Larvae called “trilobite larvae”
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Phylum Arthropoda Subphylum Crustacea Class Malacostraca Order Decapoda – crabs, lobsters, crayfish, shrimp Class Maxillopoda Subclass Cirripeda – barnacles Subclass Ostracoda - ostracodes
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Malacostraca - Decapods
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Maxillopoda - Barnacles
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Ostracodes – most small (Leperditids get up to several cm’s)
Most benthic, v small planktonic Good environmental info
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