Vendiamorpha

Vendiamorpha
Paravendia janae, Vendia sokolovi,
V. rachiata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Proarticulata
Fedonkin, 1985
Class: Vendiamorpha
Fedonkin, 1985
Family and Genera
  • Family Vendiidae
    Ivantsov (preliminary name)
    • Vendia Keller, 1969
    • Paravendia Ivantsov, 2004
  • Family Uncertain
    • Karakhtia Ivantsov, 2004

Vendiamorpha[1] is a class of extinct animals within the Ediacaran phylum Proarticulata.

The typical vendiamorph had an oval-shaped or round-shaped body divided completely into segmented isomers, that were arranged alternately in two rows with reference to the longitudinal axis of body. This phenomenon is described as the symmetry of glide reflection. Transverse elements decrease in size from one end to other and are inclined in the same direction. The larger isomers cover the smaller ones externally and the first isomer is much larger than the rest.[2][3][4] Typically, the first few, or largest isomers are fused together to form a headshield-like structure, leading some researchers to originally consider them ancestral or related to arthropods,[5][6] though, overwhelming evidence of them being proarticulatans have since lead researchers to discard this hypothesized relationship.[1][2]

Some vendiamorphs, e.g., Vendia and Paravendia, supposedly demonstrate a digestive-distributive system consisting of a simple axial tube and lateral appendages, with one lateral appendage corresponding to one isomer.[2][3]

Class Vendiamorpha currently includes only one Family Vendiidae (originally referred to as Vendomiidae as the type genus Vendomia,[7] before V. menneri was redescribed as a member of Dickinsonia[8]) that consist of species Vendia sokolovi, V. rachiata, Paravendia janae and Karakhtia nessovi from Ediacaran (Vendian) rocks of the Arkhangelsk Region, Russia.[2][3][4][9]

Pseudovendia, its name refers to the some resemblance of this fossil with imprint of the Vendia sokolovi. Originally, this fossil was interpreted as an arthropod,[10] later as a Proarticulata,[1] then speculated as possibly a frond-like organism.[11] Current scientific consensus now recognizes the poorly preserved holoytype of Pseudovendia as a pseudofossil.[12][13]

See also

List of Ediacaran genera

References

  1. 1 2 3 M. A. Fedonkin (1985). "Systematic Description of Vendian Metazoa". In Sokolov, B. S. and Iwanowski, A. B., eds., "Vendian System: Historical–Geological and Paleontological Foundation, Vol. 1: Paleontology". Moscow: Nauka, pp. 70–106.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Ivantsov, A.Y. (2001). "Vendia and Other Precambrian "Arthropods"". Paleontological Journal 35 (4): 335–343.
  3. 1 2 3 Ivantsov, A. Yu (2004). "New Proarticulata from the Vendian of the Arkhangel’sk Region" (PDF). Paleontological Journal 38 (3): 247–253.
  4. 1 2 Ivantsov, A.Y. (2004) "Vendian Animals in the Phylum Proarticulata". The Rise and Fall of the Vendian Biota. IGSP Project 493. Abstracts. Prato, Italy, p. 52.
  5. V. V. Menner. (1963). "The Other Problematical Organic Remains". In: "Stratigraphy of the USSR: Upper Precambrian". Moscow: Gos. Nauchno-Tekh. Izd., 504-507. (In Russian)
  6. Glaessner M. F., Wade M. (1971). "Praecambridium - a primitive arthropod". Lethaia 4 (1): 71–77. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1971.tb01280.x.
  7. B. M. Keller and M. A. Fedonkin (1976). "New Records of Fossils in the Valdaian Group of the Precambrian on the Syuz’ma River" (PDF). Izv. Akad. Nauk SSSR, Ser. Geol. (in Russian) 3: 38–44.
  8. Ivantsov, A. Yu. (April 2007). "Small Vendian transversely Articulated fossils". Paleontological Journal 41 (2): 113. doi:10.1134/S0031030107020013.
  9. Ivantsov, A.Y.; Malakhovskaya, Y.E.; Serezhnikova, E.A. (2004). "Some Problematic Fossils from the Vendian of the Southeastern White Sea Region" (PDF). Paleontological Journal 38 (1): 1–9.
  10. H. E. Boynton, T. D. Ford (1979). "Pseudovendia charnwoodensis — A new Precambrian arthropod from Charnwood Forest, Leicestershire". Mercian Geologist 7: 175–177.
  11. H. E. Boynton (2010). "Charnian Fossils in the Outwoods" (PDF). Mercian Geologist 17 (3): 175–177.
  12. Grazhdankin, 2007. "Leicester’s fossil celebrity: Charnia and the evolution of early life" (pages 15-16) http://www.le.ac.uk/gl/charnia2007/AbstractBooklet2007r.pdf
  13. Liu, A. G.; McIlroy, D.; Antcliffe, J. B.; Brasier, M. D. (2010). "Effaced preservation in the Ediacara biota and its implications for the early macrofossil record". Palaeontology 54 (3): 607–630. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4983.2010.01024.x.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 10, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.