Ovatoryctocara

Ovatoryctocara
Temporal range: Middle Cambrian (Ovatoryctocara zone)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Trilobita
Order: Corynexochida
Suborder: Corynexochina
Family: Oryctocephalidae
Subfamily: Oryctocarinae[1]
Genus: Ovatoryctocara
Tchernysheva, 1962
Species
  • O. ovata (Tchernysheva, 1960) (Type) synonym Oryctocara ovata
  • O. angusta (Tchernysheva, 1962) synonym Oryctocara angusta
    • O. angusta ssp. angusta
    • O. angusta ssp. snegirevae (Suvorova, 1964) synonym Oryctocara snegirevae
  • O. doliiformis Korovnikov & Shavanov, 2008
  • O. granulata (Tchernysheva, 1962) synonyms O. yaxiensis, Oryctocara granulata

Ovatoryctocara is a genus of small corynexochid trilobites from the Cambrian, that lived in what now are Siberia, China, Greenland and Canada (Newfoundland). Ovatoryctocara can be recognised by the combination of the following characters: the central raised area of the cephalon (or glabella) is approximately cylindrical and has two rows of four triangular or round pits. The thorax only has 5 or 6 segments. The tailshield (or pygidium) has an axis (or rhachis) of 6 to 12 rings, the pleural furrows are well developed and the border is absent or narrow as a hair.[2]

Etymology

The name of the genus is derived from its type Oryctocara ovata. Ovata refers to its oval overall shape, the Ancient Greek ὀρύκτης (oryctos) means "digger", and the Latin cara is a word for "head" or "face".

Biostratographic significance

The species of the genus Ovatoryctocara occur near the lower limit of the Middle Cambrian in Siberia. The first appearance datum (FAD) of Ovatoryctocara granulata has been proposed as the defining marker for the lower limit of Cambrian Stage 5. O. granulata is moderately widespread (East Siberia, South China, Greenland, and Newfoundland).[2] The International Commission on Stratigraphy has not selected a biological marker of the lower limit of Stage 5 yet.

Distribution

Description

Very small to small trilobite (maximum length approximately 1 centimetre or 0.39 inches) of more or less oval overall shape. The head shield (or cephalon) has natural fracture lines that end at the tip of the genal angle or the rear margin (or it has gonatoparian or proparian facial sutures). The central area of the cephalon (or glabella) is cylindrical or slightly expanded midlength and/or at the frontal lobe. The furrows that show the segmented origin, are most distinct in the form of four sets of rounded or triangular pits, sometimes with a shallow depression between them at the midline. The glabella is almost touching the front of the cephalon (or the pre-glabellar field is short). Narrow eye ridges emerge from the back of the frontal lobe outward and slightly backward (± 20°). Thorax of 5 or 6 segments. Pygidium approximately the same size (isopygous) or larger (macropygous) than the cephalon, with an axis of 6 to 12 rings, and clear pleural furrows. The border is lacking or hair thin. The surface may be smooth or has granules.[2]

References

  1. Shergold, J. H. (1969). Oryctocephalidae (Trilobita: Middle Cambrian) of Australia (PDF). Bulletin 104. Department of National Development: Bureau of Mineral Resoures, Geology and Geophysics. pp. 1–66.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Naimark, E.; Shabanov, Y.; Korovnikov, I. (2011). "Cambrian Trilobite Ovatoryctocara Tchernysheva, 1962 from Siberia" (PDF). Bulletin of Geosciences 86 (3): 405–422. doi:10.3140/bull.geosci.1272.
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