Biology:Triassosculda

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Short description: Extinct genus of mantis shrimp


Triassosculda
Temporal range: 250.6 Ma
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Stomatopoda
Genus: Triassosculda
Smith et al. 2023
Species:
T. ahyongi
Binomial name
Triassosculda ahyongi
Smith et al. 2023

Triassosculda is an extinct genus of mantis shrimp from the Early Triassic aged Paris biota of Idaho. Its discovery bridged a 100-million-year gap in mantis shrimp evolution from the late Carboniferous to the Jurassic. Its only species is T. ahyongi.

Discovery and naming

Triassosculda is currently known from two fossil specimens, both of which were excavated from the Paris Canyon in Idaho, US. The holotype (UBGD 30550) consists of the animal's posterior region preserved in ventral view, including the telson, uropods and last three segments of the pleon. The paratype (UBGD 294010) preserves a large part of the abdomen and possible uropods in dorsolateral view.[1]

In 2023, the genus Triassosculda was described based on these remains, with T. ahyongi as the type and only species. The generic name is combined from "Triassic" (in reference to its age) and "sculda" (a common suffix in the names of Mesozoic stomatopods). The specific name honors Shane T. Ahyong, a zoologist who has studied the evolution of mantis shrimps.[1]

Description

The fossil material of Triassosculda demonstrates features which are transitional between those of basal and derived mantis shrimps; most significantly it has a broad and triangular telson, while older Carboniferous species have a narrow telson and younger Mesozoic members have a square telson. The morphology of Triassosculda matches the hypotheses that ancestral mantis shrimps had a more shrimp-like body plan which evolved to become more lobster-like;[2] its abdomen is tall and narrow like that of a shrimp, but also stretched out straight, indicating a sprawling lobster-like stance.[1]

Classification

Smith et al. (2023) recovered Triassosculda as a basal member of the clade Unipeltata. The cladogram results of their phylogenetic analyses are displayed in the cladogram below:[1]

Stomatopoda
Archaeocaris

Archaeocaris vermiformis

Archaeocaris graffhami

Bairdops elegans

Perimecturus

Perimecturus parki

Perimecturus rapax

Bairdops beargulchensis

Daidal pattoni

Daidal schoellmanni

Daidal acanthocercus

Gorgonophontes fraiponti

Gorgonophontes peleron

Chabardella spinosa

Tyrannophontes theridion

Tyrannophontes gigantion

Unipeltata

Triassosculda ahyongi

Tyrannosculda laurae

Pseudosculda laevis

Archaeosculda phoenicia

Sculda pennata

Sculda syriaca

Ursquilla yehoachi

Lysiosquilla nkporoensis

Nodosculda fisherorum

Squilla mantis

Archaeostomatopods
Palaeostomatopods
Pseudosculdids

Palaeoenvironment

Triassosculda was discovered in deposits of Paris Canyon, Idaho, dating back to the earliest Spathian age of the early Triassic period, around 250.6 million years ago. It is part of a diverse fossil assemblage known as the Paris biota, which would have lived in a shallow inland sea on the western coast of Pangaea near the equator.[3][4] Many other fossil animals are also parts of the Paris biota and would have lived alongside Triassosculda, including other crustaceans, thylacocephalans, ammonoids, nautiloids, bivalves and fish.[5][6][7]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Smith, C.P.A.; Aubier, P.; Charbonnier, S.; Laville, T.; Olivier, N.; Escarguel, G.; Jenks, J.F.; Bylund, K.G. et al. (2023-03-31). "Closing a major gap in mantis shrimp evolution – first fossils of Stomatopoda from the Triassic" (in en). Bulletin of Geosciences 98 (1): 95–110. doi:10.3140/bull.geosci.1864. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/369959650. 
  2. Haug, Carolin; Haug, Joachim T. (2021-04-16). "A new fossil mantis shrimp and the convergent evolution of a lobster-like morphotype" (in en). PeerJ 9: e11124. doi:10.7717/peerj.11124. PMID 33959413. 
  3. Brayard, Arnaud; Krumenacker, L. J.; Botting, Joseph P.; Jenks, James F.; Bylund, Kevin G.; Fara, Emmanuel; Vennin, Emmanuelle; Olivier, Nicolas et al. (2017-02-03). "Unexpected Early Triassic marine ecosystem and the rise of the Modern evolutionary fauna" (in en). Science Advances 3 (2): e1602159. doi:10.1126/sciadv.1602159. PMID 28246643. Bibcode2017SciA....3E2159B. 
  4. Smith, Christopher P. A.; Laville, Thomas; Fara, Emmanuel; Escarguel, Gilles; Olivier, Nicolas; Vennin, Emmanuelle; Goudemand, Nicolas; Bylund, Kevin G. et al. (2021-10-04). "Exceptional fossil assemblages confirm the existence of complex Early Triassic ecosystems during the early Spathian" (in en). Scientific Reports 11 (1): 19657. doi:10.1038/s41598-021-99056-8. PMID 34608207. Bibcode2021NatSR..1119657S. 
  5. Smith, Christopher P. A.; Charbonnier, Sylvain; Jenks, James F.; Bylund, Kevin G.; Escarguel, Gilles; Olivier, Nicolas; Fara, Emmanuel; Brayard, Arnaud (November 2022). "The Paris Biota decapod (Arthropoda) fauna and the diversity of Triassic decapods" (in en). Journal of Paleontology 96 (6): 1235–1263. doi:10.1017/jpa.2022.34. Bibcode2022JPal...96.1235S. https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0022336022000348/type/journal_article. 
  6. Charbonnier, Sylvain; Brayard, Arnaud (June 2019). "New thylacocephalans from the Early Triassic Paris Biota (Bear Lake County, Idaho, USA)" (in en). Geobios 54: 37–43. doi:10.1016/j.geobios.2019.04.005. Bibcode2019Geobi..54...37C. 
  7. Brayard, Arnaud; Jenks, James F.; Bylund, Kevin G. (June 2019). "Ammonoids and nautiloids from the earliest Spathian Paris Biota and other early Spathian localities in southeastern Idaho, USA" (in en). Geobios 54: 13–36. doi:10.1016/j.geobios.2019.04.007. Bibcode2019Geobi..54...13B. 

Wikidata ☰ Q123347044 entry