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Phacops

Phacops is a genus of trilobites in the order Phacopida, family Phacopidae, that lived in Europe, northwestern Africa, North and South America and China from the Late Ordovician until the very end of the Devonian,[2] with a broader time range described from the Late Ordovician.[3] It was a rounded animal, with a globose head and large eyes, and probably fed on detritus.[4] Phacops is often found rolled up ("volvation"), a biological defense mechanism that is widespread among smaller trilobites but further perfected in this genus.[4]

Phacops
Temporal range: Late Ordovician-Late Devonian
~457–360 Ma
Phacops sp. from the Eifelian of Morocco
Phacops sp. eye
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Trilobita
Order: Phacopida
Family: Phacopidae
Genus: Phacops
Emmrich, 1839
Type species
Calymene latifrons
Bronn, 1825
Species

and see text

Synonyms
  • Portlockia
  • Somatrikelon
  • Somatrikopon

Description

Like in all sighted Phacopina, the eyes of Phacops are compounded of very large, separately set lenses without a common cornea (so called schizochroal eyes), and like almost all other Phacopina, the articulate mid-length part of the body (or thorax) in Phacops has 11 segments.

 
Unknown enrolled Phacops sp. from the Eifelian of Morocco.

The central raised area (or glabella) of the headshield (or cephalon) is moderately to strongly inflated near to its front, more or less flattened on the top, falling vertically to or slightly overhanging the border furrow. Up to three lateral furrows may be discernable on the glabella behind the utterly dominating frontal lobe. From the back there is a very distinct occipital ring, and in front of that a distinct preoccipital ring which is weakly divided into a strongly convex central lobe and weakly convex lateral lobes. The large to medium size eyes have a crescent shaped outline, and are elevated high above the cheeks. The steep visual surface is kidney shaped. The back corners of the cephalon (or genal angles) are acutely to bluntly rounded, but a genal spine is lacking in adults. In the ventral surface of the seam (or doublure) is in the frontal half of the cephalon a continuous furrow, delineated by ridges, and with notches laterally. This so-called vindicular furrow serves to lock the rim of the tailshield to the headshield when the trilobite is enrolled.

The axial rings of the thorax do not have convex lateral axial nodes on its outer surface. The tailshield (or pygidium) is well segmented. The pygidial axis has 9 to 11 rings, and the pleural areas to the sides have 5 to 8 pairs of recognizable ribs. Furrows between the ribs are deep, those that divide each rib in frontal and rear bands are very shallow, and the frontal bands are widest. The surface of the exoskeleton is covered in tubercles.[5]

Camouflage

 
Reconstruction of Phacops with a speculative, cryptic "Rorschach" pattern based on the proposed ability to camouflage.

There are specimens known of Phacops rana with many irregular black spots. Because similar spots in a specimen of Greenops boothi from the same site are arranged in rows, it may be assumed that they are original and not caused by the fossilisation process. The spots are irregular and have spurs branching outwardly, similar to the melanophores in many extant animals. In one specimen, the black spots are much larger than in another one. It is quite conceivable that changing the size of the melanophores enabled Phacops rana to camouflage itself in different environments.[6]

Taxonomy

The concept of many fossil taxa has been tightened over time, including Phacops. As a result, Boeckops, Chotecops, Paciphacops, Prokops and Viaphacops have been erected as subgenera of Phacops, and are now widely regarded as genera in their own right.[7] Most recent, it was considered that some North-American and North-African species on the one hand and European species on the other hand differ sufficiently from each other to be assigned to separate genera. As the type species is the European P. latifrons, the North-American species are now called Eldredgeops. However, the previous assigned species, like Phacops rana, are still widely used among fossil collectors. Eldredgeops has a raised ridge along the ventral margin of the cephalon, the glabella is more inflated, the lateral parts of the preoccipital ring are not round but rectangular, the palpebral area and palpebral lobe are larger than in P. latifrons, and there is no fold right behind the posterior vertical row of lenses, nor an isolated raised area just below the lenses. Not all of these characters may differentiate between Eldredgeops and other Phacops species however.[8]

During the Eifelian in the present-day Belgian Ardennes, several Phacops species developed from each other, the oldest being P. imitator, followed by P. fragosus, then P. latifrons and finally P. sartenaeri. These species show a decrease in the number of lenses, which is a more widespread and recurring trend in many Phacopinae.[9]

Fossils of Phacops salteri have been found in the trilobite-rich Late Emsian to Early Givetian Floresta Formation of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense, Colombia.[10]

Species

Phacops currently contains the following species:

  • P. accipitrinus (Phillips, 1841)[11]
  • P. algericus Alberti, 1983
  • P. breviceps Barrande, 1846
  • P. chlupaci Alberti, 1983
  • P. circumspectans Paeckelmann, 1913
  • P. degener Barrande, 1852
  • P. fecundus
  • P. fragosus Struve, 1970[9]
  • P. granulatus (Munster, 1840) synonyms Calymene granulata, P. posidoniae[12]
  • P. hoseri Hawle & Corda, 1847
  • P. iowensis Delo, 1935[13]
  • P. imitator Struve, 1970[9]
  • P. kockeli Alberti, 1968
  • P. latifrons (Bronn, 1825)[9]
  • P. maurulus
  • P. modestus Barrande
  • P. ouarouroutensis Crônier, 2018
  • P. platilegnotor
  • P. salteri Kozlowski, 1923
  • P. sartenaeri Struve, 1985[9]
  • P. sobolevi Kielan, 1954
  • P. sternbergi
  • P. turco Richter & Richter
  • P. wedekindi Richter & Richter, 1926[12]
  • P. zinkeni F.A. Roemer, 1843

Species previously assigned to Phacops

A number of species previously assigned to the genus Phacops have since been transferred to other genera:[1][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22]

References

  1. ^ a b Moore, R.C. (1959). Arthropoda I - Arthropoda General Features, Proarthropoda, Euarthropoda General Features, Trilobitomorpha. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Vol. Part O. Boulder, Colorado/Lawrence, Kansas: Geological Society of America & University of Kansas Press. pp. 1–560. ISBN 978-0-8137-3015-8.
  2. ^ Ivo Chlupáč (1973). "The distribution of phacopid trilobites in space and time" (PDF). Fossils and Strata. 4: 399–408.
  3. ^ Phacops at Fossilworks.org
  4. ^ a b David L. Bruton & Winfried Haas (2001). Philip D. Lane, Derek J. Siveter & Richard A. Fortey (ed.). Trilobites and their Relatives: Contributions from the Third International Conference, Making Phacops come alive. Special Papers in Palaeontology. Vol. 70. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 331–348. ISBN 978-0-901702-81-4.
  5. ^ Linliang Yuan; Liwen Xiang (1997). "Trilobite Fauna at the Devonian-Carboniferous boundary in South China (S-Guizhou and N-Guangxi)" (PDF). Special Publication of the National Museum of Natural Science. 8.
  6. ^ George C. Esker III (1968). "Color Markings in Phacops and Greenops from the Devonian of New York". Palaeontology. II (4): 498–499.
  7. ^ Chlupac, I. (1975). The distribution of phacopid trilobites in space and time. Fossils and Strata. pp. 399–408. ISBN 8 2-00-04963-9.
  8. ^ Gerry, K. "Phacops vs. Eldredgeops". The Fossil Forum.
  9. ^ a b c d e Viersen, van, A.P. (2004). "De mythe van Phacops latifrons [The Myth of Phacops latifrons]". Grondboor & Hamer. 3/4: 66–68.
  10. ^ Floresta Fauna at Fossilworks.org
  11. ^ Global Names Index. "Repository "Index to Organism Names"". Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  12. ^ a b Osmolska, H. (1953). "Famennian Phacopidae from the Holy Cross Mountains (Poland)" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 3 (2).
  13. ^ Eldredge, N. (1972). "Systematics and evolution of Phacops rana (Green, 1832) and Phacops iowensis Delo, 1935 (Trilobita) from the Middle Devonian of North America". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 147 (article 2): 45–114. hdl:2246/1095.
  14. ^ Shergold, J.H. (1966). (PDF). Palaeontology. 9 (2): 183–207. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-16.
  15. ^ Crônier, C. (2003). "Systematic relationships of the blind phacopine trilobite Trimerocephalus, with a new species from Causses−et−Veyran, Montagne Noire" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 48 (1): 55–70. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  16. ^ "Acuticeps Kayser, 1889". Global Names Index. Retrieved 23 December 2013.
  17. ^ Ramskjöld, L.; Werdelin, L. (1991). "The phylogeny and evolution of some phacopid trilobites". Cladistics. 7: 29–74. doi:10.1111/j.1096-0031.1991.tb00021.x. S2CID 85076301.
  18. ^ Corbacho, Joan (2011). (PDF). Batelleria. 16: 16–31. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-12-20.
  19. ^ Hansen, George P. (2009). Trilobites of Black Cat Mountain. iUniverse.
  20. ^ Andrew McRae. "Trilobites in Murchison's "Siluria"".
  21. ^ Crônier, Catherine; Feist, Raimond (2000). "Evolution et systématique du groupe Cryphops (Phacopinae, Trilobita) du Dévonien Supérieur" [Evolution and systematics of the Cryphops group (Phacopinae, Trilobita) from the Late Devonian]. Senckenbergiana Lethaea. 79 (2): 501–515. doi:10.1007/bf03043651. S2CID 131283519.
  22. ^ Schoenemann, Brigitte; Clarkson, Euan N.K. (2013). "Discovery of some 400 million year-old sensory structures in the compound eyes of trilobites". Scientific Reports. 3 (1429): 1429. doi:10.1038/srep01429. PMC 3596982. PMID 23492459.

External links

  •   Media related to Phacops at Wikimedia Commons

phacops, genus, trilobites, order, phacopida, family, phacopidae, that, lived, europe, northwestern, africa, north, south, america, china, from, late, ordovician, until, very, devonian, with, broader, time, range, described, from, late, ordovician, rounded, an. Phacops is a genus of trilobites in the order Phacopida family Phacopidae that lived in Europe northwestern Africa North and South America and China from the Late Ordovician until the very end of the Devonian 2 with a broader time range described from the Late Ordovician 3 It was a rounded animal with a globose head and large eyes and probably fed on detritus 4 Phacops is often found rolled up volvation a biological defense mechanism that is widespread among smaller trilobites but further perfected in this genus 4 PhacopsTemporal range Late Ordovician Late Devonian 457 360 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NPhacops sp from the Eifelian of MoroccoPhacops sp eyeScientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaClass TrilobitaOrder PhacopidaFamily PhacopidaeGenus PhacopsEmmrich 1839Type speciesCalymene latifronsBronn 1825SpeciesP latifrons Bronn 1825 type synonym Calymene latifrons 1 and see textSynonymsPortlockia Somatrikelon Somatrikopon Contents 1 Description 1 1 Camouflage 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Species 2 2 Species previously assigned to Phacops 3 References 4 External linksDescription EditLike in all sighted Phacopina the eyes of Phacops are compounded of very large separately set lenses without a common cornea so called schizochroal eyes and like almost all other Phacopina the articulate mid length part of the body or thorax in Phacops has 11 segments Unknown enrolled Phacops sp from the Eifelian of Morocco The central raised area or glabella of the headshield or cephalon is moderately to strongly inflated near to its front more or less flattened on the top falling vertically to or slightly overhanging the border furrow Up to three lateral furrows may be discernable on the glabella behind the utterly dominating frontal lobe From the back there is a very distinct occipital ring and in front of that a distinct preoccipital ring which is weakly divided into a strongly convex central lobe and weakly convex lateral lobes The large to medium size eyes have a crescent shaped outline and are elevated high above the cheeks The steep visual surface is kidney shaped The back corners of the cephalon or genal angles are acutely to bluntly rounded but a genal spine is lacking in adults In the ventral surface of the seam or doublure is in the frontal half of the cephalon a continuous furrow delineated by ridges and with notches laterally This so called vindicular furrow serves to lock the rim of the tailshield to the headshield when the trilobite is enrolled The axial rings of the thorax do not have convex lateral axial nodes on its outer surface The tailshield or pygidium is well segmented The pygidial axis has 9 to 11 rings and the pleural areas to the sides have 5 to 8 pairs of recognizable ribs Furrows between the ribs are deep those that divide each rib in frontal and rear bands are very shallow and the frontal bands are widest The surface of the exoskeleton is covered in tubercles 5 Camouflage Edit Reconstruction of Phacops with a speculative cryptic Rorschach pattern based on the proposed ability to camouflage There are specimens known of Phacops rana with many irregular black spots Because similar spots in a specimen of Greenops boothi from the same site are arranged in rows it may be assumed that they are original and not caused by the fossilisation process The spots are irregular and have spurs branching outwardly similar to the melanophores in many extant animals In one specimen the black spots are much larger than in another one It is quite conceivable that changing the size of the melanophores enabled Phacops rana to camouflage itself in different environments 6 Taxonomy EditThe concept of many fossil taxa has been tightened over time including Phacops As a result Boeckops Chotecops Paciphacops Prokops and Viaphacops have been erected as subgenera of Phacops and are now widely regarded as genera in their own right 7 Most recent it was considered that some North American and North African species on the one hand and European species on the other hand differ sufficiently from each other to be assigned to separate genera As the type species is the European P latifrons the North American species are now called Eldredgeops However the previous assigned species like Phacops rana are still widely used among fossil collectors Eldredgeops has a raised ridge along the ventral margin of the cephalon the glabella is more inflated the lateral parts of the preoccipital ring are not round but rectangular the palpebral area and palpebral lobe are larger than in P latifrons and there is no fold right behind the posterior vertical row of lenses nor an isolated raised area just below the lenses Not all of these characters may differentiate between Eldredgeops and other Phacops species however 8 During the Eifelian in the present day Belgian Ardennes several Phacops species developed from each other the oldest being P imitator followed by P fragosus then P latifrons and finally P sartenaeri These species show a decrease in the number of lenses which is a more widespread and recurring trend in many Phacopinae 9 Fossils of Phacops salteri have been found in the trilobite rich Late Emsian to Early Givetian Floresta Formation of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense Colombia 10 Species Edit Phacops currently contains the following species P accipitrinus Phillips 1841 11 P algericus Alberti 1983 P breviceps Barrande 1846 P chlupaci Alberti 1983 P circumspectans Paeckelmann 1913 P degener Barrande 1852 P fecundus P fragosus Struve 1970 9 P granulatus Munster 1840 synonyms Calymene granulata P posidoniae 12 P hoseri Hawle amp Corda 1847 P iowensis Delo 1935 13 P imitator Struve 1970 9 P kockeli Alberti 1968 P latifrons Bronn 1825 9 P maurulus P modestus Barrande P ouarouroutensis Cronier 2018 P platilegnotor P salteri Kozlowski 1923 P sartenaeri Struve 1985 9 P sobolevi Kielan 1954 P sternbergi P turco Richter amp Richter P wedekindi Richter amp Richter 1926 12 P zinkeni F A Roemer 1843 Species previously assigned to Phacops Edit A number of species previously assigned to the genus Phacops have since been transferred to other genera 1 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 P acuticeps Acuticryphops acuticeps P arcticus Acernaspis arctica P asper Ananaspis aspera P birdsongensis Paciphacops birdsongensis P boecki Boeckops boecki P braziliensis Phacopidina braziliensis P bronni Reedops bronni P bulliceps Eophacops bulliceps P caecus Trimerocephalus caecus P caffer Metacryphaeus caffer P cambelli Paciphacops cambelli P claviger Paciphacops claviger P caudatus Dalmanites caudatus P constrictus Acastoides constrictus P coronatus Heliocephalus coronatus P cristatus bombifrons Viaphacops bombifrons P cristatus cristatus Viaphacops cristatus P crossleii Paciphacops crossleii P cryptophthalmoides Trimerocephalus cryptophthalmoides P cryptophthalmus Cryphops cryptophthalmus P cultifrons Eophacops trapeziceps P dagincourti Bouleia dagincourti P deshayesi Zeliszkella deshayesi P downingiae var a vulgaris Acaste downingiae P downingiae var b macrops Acastocephala macrops P downingiae var g inflatus Acaste inflata P ensae Weyerites ensae P fecundus Ananaspis fecunda P fecundus minor Lochkovella minor P ferdinandi Chotecops ferdinandi P glaber Eophacops glaber P glockeri Phacopidella glockeri P grimbergi Lochkovella grimbergi P handwerki Eophacops handwerki P hanusi Lochkovella hanusi P hoeninghausi Prokops hoeninghausi P hudsonicus Paciphacops hudsonicus P incisus Nephranops incisus P khatangensis Acernaspis khatangensis P kayseri Eocryphops kayseri P lacunosus Trimerocephalus lacunosus P latigenalis Paciphacops latigenalis P latilimbatus Cryphops latilimbatus P lentiginosus Trimerocephalus lentiginosus P limbatus Dianops limbatus P logani Paciphacops logani P lopatini Monorakos lopatini P mancus Eophacops mancus P marklandensis Acernaspis marklandensis P mastophthalmus Trimerocephalus mastophthalmus P metacernaspis generic assignment uncertain P michelini Pseudocryphaeus michelini P microps Kainops microps P milleri Eldredgeops milleri P miser Lochkovella miser P musheni Eophacops musheni P nudus generic assignment uncertain P ocellus Hadrorachus ocellus P opitzi Chotecops opitzi P orestes Acernaspis orestes P orientalis Ananaspis orientalis P parabolus Phillipsinella parabola P phillipsi Kloucekia phillipsi P primaevus Acernaspis primaeva P prokopi Prokops prokopi P pulcellus Acernaspis pulcella P quadrilineatus Acernaspis quadrilineata P rana Eldredgeops rana P raymondi Kainops raymondi P schlosseri Struveops schlosseri P serratus Paciphacops serratus P schlotheimi Geesops schlotheimi P socialis Dalmanitina socialis P speculator Austerops speculator P sphaericeps Dereimsia sphaericeps P steinachensis Trimerocephalus steinachensis P stellifer Greenops Neometacanthus stellifer P stokesii generic assignment uncertain P straitonensis Podowrinella straitonensis P trapeziceps Eophacops trapeziceps P veles Kainops veles P vodorezovi Trimerocephalus vodorezovi P volborthi Denckmannites volborthi P wocklumeriae Weyerites wocklumeriaeReferences Edit a b Moore R C 1959 Arthropoda I Arthropoda General Features Proarthropoda Euarthropoda General Features Trilobitomorpha Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology Vol Part O Boulder Colorado Lawrence Kansas Geological Society of America amp University of Kansas Press pp 1 560 ISBN 978 0 8137 3015 8 Ivo Chlupac 1973 The distribution of phacopid trilobites in space and time PDF Fossils and Strata 4 399 408 Phacops at Fossilworks org a b David L Bruton amp Winfried Haas 2001 Philip D Lane Derek J Siveter amp Richard A Fortey ed Trilobites and their Relatives Contributions from the Third International Conference MakingPhacopscome alive Special Papers in Palaeontology Vol 70 Oxford Wiley Blackwell pp 331 348 ISBN 978 0 901702 81 4 Linliang Yuan Liwen Xiang 1997 Trilobite Fauna at the Devonian Carboniferous boundary in South China S Guizhou and N Guangxi PDF Special Publication of the National Museum of Natural Science 8 George C Esker III 1968 Color Markings in Phacops and Greenops from the Devonian of New York Palaeontology II 4 498 499 Chlupac I 1975 The distribution of phacopid trilobites in space and time Fossils and Strata pp 399 408 ISBN 8 2 00 04963 9 Gerry K Phacops vs Eldredgeops The Fossil Forum a b c d e Viersen van A P 2004 De mythe van Phacops latifrons The Myth of Phacops latifrons Grondboor amp Hamer 3 4 66 68 Floresta Fauna at Fossilworks org Global Names Index Repository Index to Organism Names Retrieved 4 November 2013 a b Osmolska H 1953 Famennian Phacopidae from the Holy Cross Mountains Poland PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 3 2 Eldredge N 1972 Systematics and evolution of Phacops rana Green 1832 and Phacops iowensis Delo 1935 Trilobita from the Middle Devonian of North America Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 147 article 2 45 114 hdl 2246 1095 Shergold J H 1966 A revision of Acaste downingiae Murchison and related trilobites PDF Palaeontology 9 2 183 207 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 16 Cronier C 2003 Systematic relationships of the blind phacopine trilobite Trimerocephalus with a new species from Causses et Veyran Montagne Noire PDF Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 48 1 55 70 Retrieved 4 November 2013 Acuticeps Kayser 1889 Global Names Index Retrieved 23 December 2013 Ramskjold L Werdelin L 1991 The phylogeny and evolution of some phacopid trilobites Cladistics 7 29 74 doi 10 1111 j 1096 0031 1991 tb00021 x S2CID 85076301 Corbacho Joan 2011 Trilobites from the Upper Ordovician of Bou Nemrou El Kaid Errami Morocco Trilobitas del Ordovicico Superior de Bou Nemrou El Kaid Errami Marruecos PDF Batelleria 16 16 31 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 12 20 Hansen George P 2009 Trilobites of Black Cat Mountain iUniverse Andrew McRae Trilobites in Murchison s Siluria Cronier Catherine Feist Raimond 2000 Evolution et systematique du groupe Cryphops Phacopinae Trilobita du Devonien Superieur Evolution and systematics of the Cryphops group Phacopinae Trilobita from the Late Devonian Senckenbergiana Lethaea 79 2 501 515 doi 10 1007 bf03043651 S2CID 131283519 Schoenemann Brigitte Clarkson Euan N K 2013 Discovery of some 400 million year old sensory structures in the compound eyes of trilobites Scientific Reports 3 1429 1429 doi 10 1038 srep01429 PMC 3596982 PMID 23492459 External links Edit Arthropods portal Palaeontology portal Paleozoic portal Media related to Phacops at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Phacops amp oldid 1093208456, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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