Trigonotarbida

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

iTrigonotarbid
Fossil range: late Silurian–early Permian
Conservation status
Extinct (fossil)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Trigonotarbida
Petrunkevitch, 1949
Family

Anthracomartidae
Anthracosironidae
Trigonotarbidaincertae
Palaeocharinidae
Eophrynidae
Kreischeriidae
Trigonotarbidae
Lissomartidae
Trigonomartidae

The Order Trigonotarbida is an extinct group of arachnids whose fossil record extends from the Silurian to the Lower Permian and are known from several localities in Europe and North America. They superficially resemble spiders, to which they were clearly related.

Both have eight legs and a pair of pedipalps. They also have two main body parts (cephalothorax and abdomen). It was once thought that trigonotarbids lacked the silk-producing spinnerets that have apparently been crucial to the spider's evolutionary success, though in recent years at least one fossil find seems to show distinct microtubercles on its hind legs, akin to those used by spiders to direct and manipulate their silk.

They also have strongly segmented abdomen and hard, chitinous exoskeleton and don't exhibit the constriction that spiders have between the cephalothorax and the opisthosoma.

These early arachnids seem to have been adapted to stalking prey on the ground. They have been found within the very structure of ground-dwellings plants, possibly where they hid to await their prey.

Trigonotarbids are currently the oldest known land arthropods. They lack silk glands on the opisthosoma and cheliceral poison glands, and most likely represented independent offshoots of the Arachnida.

They are characterized by opisthosomal tergites divided into median and lateral plates [1]. This character is shared with Ricinulei [2], supporting the sister group relationship between these two taxa recently reported by cladistic analysis [3].

There is also a proposal that the Trigonotarbida are members of the Tetrapulmonata [4].

[edit] References

  1. ^ Dunlop, J. A. (1995). Redescription of the Pennsylvanian trigonotarbid arachnid Lissomartus Petrunkevitch 1949 from Mazon Creek, Illinois. The Journal of Arachnology 23: 118–124.
  2. ^ Dunlop, J. A. (1996). Evidence for a sister group relationship between Ricinulei and Trigonotarbida. Bulletin of the British Arachnological Society 10: 193–204.
  3. ^ Giribet, G., G. D. Edgecombe, W. C. Wheeler & C. Babbitt (2002). {{{title}}}. Cladistics 18: 5–70.
  4. ^ Shear, W. A., P. A. Selden, W. D. I. Rofle, P. M. Bonamo & J. D. Grierson (1987). New terrestrial arachnids from the Devonian of Gilboa, New York (Arachnida, Trigonotarbida). American Museum Novitates 2901: 1–74.