Biology:Xandarella

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Short description: Genus of arthropods (fossil)

Xandarella
Temporal range: Cambrian stage 3–Cambrian Stage 5
Xandarella.png
Drawing of X. spectaculum
Scientific classification e
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
(unranked): Artiopoda
Subphylum: Trilobitomorpha
(unranked): Xandarellida
Genus: Xandarella
Hou et al. 1991
Type species
Xandarella spectaculum
Hou et al. 1991
Other species

Xandarella mauretanica Ortega-Hernández et al, 2017

X. mauretanica type specimen, showing biaramous appendages
Drawing of the ventral morphology of X. mauretanica

Xandarella is an extinct genus of xandarellid artiopodan known from the Cambrian of China and Morocco, the type species Xandarella spectaculum was described in 1991 from the Cambrian Stage 3 aged Chengjiang Biota in China.[1] An additional species Xandarella mauretanica was described from the Cambrian Stage 5 Tatelt Formation in Morocco in 2017, which preserved only the ventral anatomy.[2] Like other Xandarellids, the exoskeleton is unmineralised. The cephalon has pronounced eye slits, presumably derived from ancestral ventral stalked eyes.[3]

References

  1. Hou, Xianguang. (1997). Arthropods of the Lower Cambrian Chengjiang fauna, southwest China. Univ.-Forl. ISBN 82-00-37693-1. OCLC 614008940. http://worldcat.org/oclc/614008940. 
  2. Ortega-Hernández, Javier; Azizi, Abdelfattah; Hearing, Thomas W.; Harvey, Thomas H. P.; Edgecombe, Gregory D.; Hafid, Ahmid; El Hariri, Khadija (March 2017). "A xandarellid artiopodan from Morocco – a middle Cambrian link between soft-bodied euarthropod communities in North Africa and South China" (in en). Scientific Reports 7 (1): 42616. doi:10.1038/srep42616. ISSN 2045-2322. PMID 28211461. Bibcode2017NatSR...742616O. 
  3. Chen, Xiaohan; Ortega-Hernández, Javier; Wolfe, Joanna M.; Zhai, Dayou; Hou, Xianguang; Chen, Ailin; Mai, Huijuan; Liu, Yu (December 2019). "The appendicular morphology of Sinoburius lunaris and the evolution of the artiopodan clade Xandarellida (Euarthropoda, early Cambrian) from South China" (in en). BMC Evolutionary Biology 19 (1): 165. doi:10.1186/s12862-019-1491-3. ISSN 1471-2148. PMID 31387545. 

Wikidata ☰ Q92115381 entry