Trimerocephalus

Trimerocephalus
Temporal range: Famennian
Two cephalons of the trilobite Trimerocephalus interruptus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Trilobita
Superorder: Phacopina
Order: Phacopida
Superfamily: Phacopoidea
Family: Phacopidae
Genus: Trimerocephalus[1][2][3]
M'Coy, 1849
species
  • T. mastophthalmus Reinh. Richter, 1856 (type) synonym Phacops mastophthalmus, Trinucleus laevis
  • T. caecus (Gürich, 1896) synonym Phacops caecus
  • T. chopini Kin & Blazejowski, 2013
  • T. cryptophthalmoides (Maksimova, 1955) synonym Phacops cryptophthalmoides
  • T. dianopsoides Osmólska, 1963
  • T. interruptus Berkowski, 1991
  • T. lacunosus (Pfeiffer, 1959) synonym Phacops lacunosus
  • T. lelievrei Crônier & Feist, 1997
  • T. lentiginosus (Maksimova, 1955) synonym Phacops lentiginosus
  • T. mimbi Feist, McNamarra, Crônier & Lerosey-Aubril, 2009
  • T. nigritus Crônier, 2003
  • T. polonicus Osmólska, 1958
  • T. procurvus Arbizu, 1985
  • T. shotoriensis Feist, Yasdi & Becker, 2003
  • T. sponsor Chlupač, 1966
  • T. steinachensis (Richter & Richter, 1926) synonym Phacops steinachensis
  • T. tardispinosus Feist & Becker, 1997
  • T. trifolius (Osmólska, 1958) synonym Dianops trifolius
  • T. vodorezovi (Maksimova, 1955) synonym Phacops vodorezovi
Synonyms

Eutrimerocephalus

Trimerocephalus is a genus of eyeless trilobites from the order Phacopida, family Phacopidae. It lived during the final stage of the Devonian, the Famennian, and became extinct at the end of this stage, together with all other trilobites with the exception of some Proetida. It can be found in Australia, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Iran, Kazakhstan, Morocco, Poland, the Russian Federation (Urals), Spain, and the United Kingdom (England).

Distribution

Species belonging to the genus Trimerocephalus have been found in Europe, Morocco, Iran and Australia.[1][2]

Taxonomy

the relationships between species assigned to Trimerocephalus

Acuticryphops is probably ancestral to Trimerocephalus, and mainly differs from its descendants in having an eye lobe with a small number of lenses. Crônier, 2003, erected the subgenus Trimerocephalus (Trifoliops) containing T. trifolius and T. nigritus.[1] In order not to be polyphyletic, T. (Trifoliops) would need to include at least T. steinachensis, and preferably T. dianopsoides as well. These species are in the same clade as T. mastophtalmus however, which is the type of the genus Trimerocephalus, which would by definition be in the nominal subgenus Trimerocephalus (Trimerocephalus). This in turn would prompt the erection of an other subgenus with all remaining species shown in the cladogram.

Description

Trimerocephalus is one of several phacopid genera that is eyeless (others being Dianops, Ductina, and Trimerocephaloides). The dorsal facial sutures are not functional, so cranidia and free cheeks (or librigenae) are not found separated. The marginal ridge bordering the cheeks is wide and convex. The part of the margin that is tucked-under (or doublure) and only visible when viewing the cephalon from the belly (or ventral side), is short and flat. The vincular furrow, a groove that fits the margin of the tailpiece or pygidium when the animal was enrolled, is wide and deep. The pygidium is about 3 times wider than long.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Crônier, C. (2003). "Systematic relationships of the blind phacopine trilobite Trimerocephalus, with a new species from Causses−et−Veyran, Montagne Noire" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 48 (1): 55–70. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  2. 1 2 Feist, R.; McNamara, K.J.; Crônier, C.; Lerosey-Aubril, R. (2009). "Patterns of extinction and recovery of phacopid trilobites during the Frasnian-Famennian (Late Devonian) mass extinction event, Canning Basin, Western Australia" (PDF). Geological Magazine. 146 (1): 12–33. doi:10.1017/s0016756808005335. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  3. Kin, A.; Blazejowski, B. (2013). "A new Trimerocephalus species (Trilobita, Phacopidae) from the Late Devonian (Early Famennian) of Poland" (PDF). Zootaxa. 3626 (3): 345–355. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.3626.3.3.
  4. Moore, R.C. (1959). Arthropoda I - Arthropoda General Features, Proarthropoda, Euarthropoda General Features, Trilobitomorpha. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part O. Boulder, Colorado/Lawrence, Kansas: Geological Society of America/University of Kansas Press. pp. 1–560. ISBN 0-8137-3015-5.
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