Taklamakania
Taklamakania Temporal range: late Caradoc | |
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T. tarimensis | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Trilobita |
Order: | Asaphida |
Suborder: | Trinucleina |
Family: | Raphiophoridae |
Subfamily: | Raphiophorinae |
Genus: | Taklamakania W.T. Zhang, 1979, non Taklamakania Ferrer & Yvinec, 2004 (tenebrionid beetle) = Paranemia Heyden, 1892[1] |
Type species | |
Taklamakania tarimensis | |
species | |
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Taklamakania is a genus of asaphid trilobites of the family Raphiophoridae that lived during the late Caradoc of Inner Mongolia, China. Like all raphiophorids it is blind, with a headshield (or cephalon) that is subsemicircular, carrying genal spines and a forward directed spine on the central raised area (or glabella), with the front of the glabella inflated and the natural fracture lines (or sutures) of the cephalon coinciding with its margin. It is easily distinguished from most other raphiophorids by the 3 thorax segments. Pseudampyxina, Nanshanaspis, and Kongqiangheia also have only 3 such segments, but all three lack the frontal spine that emanates from the glabellum of Taklamakania species. All other raphiophorid genera have at least 5 thorax segments. Three species, T. tarimensis, T. tarimheensis, and T. xinjiangensis, have been assigned to this genus sofar.[2]
Etymology
The generic name Taklamakania refers to the Taklamakan desert, the area where its fossils were found. The species epithet tarimensis is also a geographic derivation in reference to the Tarim basin, which includes the Taklamakan desert.
Taxonomy
Adult T. tarimensis are almost indistingishable from juvenile Ampyxina powelli, and it is assumed that Taklamakania developed from Ampyxina through paedomorphosis.[2]
Species that may be confused with Taklamakania
- T. lepetzi = Paranemia bicolor, (a tenebrionid beetle)
References
- ↑ Medvedev, G.S. (2006). "To the Systematics and Nomenclature of Tenebrionid Beetles of the Tribes Phaleriini, Lachnogyini, Klewariini, and Blaptini (Coleoptera, Tenebrionidae)" (PDF). Entomological Review 86 (7): 820–839. doi:10.1134/S0013873806070062.
- 1 2 Zhou, Z.; Webby, B.D.; Yuan, W. (1995). "Ordovician trilobites from the Yingan Formation of northwestern Tarim, Xinjiang, northwestern China". Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology 19 (1): 47–72. doi:10.1080/03115519508619098.