Newly discovered morphology of the Silurian sea spider Haliestes and its implications

Author:

Siveter Derek J.12ORCID,Sabroux Romain3ORCID,Briggs Derek E. G.4ORCID,Siveter David J.5ORCID,Sutton Mark D.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Earth Collections Oxford University Museum of Natural History Oxford OX1 3PW UK

2. Department of Earth Sciences University of Oxford South Parks Road Oxford OX1 3AN UK

3. Bristol Palaeobiology Group, School of Earth Sciences University of Bristol Life Sciences Building, 24 Tyndall Avenue Bristol BS8 1TG UK

4. Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences, and Yale Peabody Museum Yale University PO Box 208109 New Haven CT 06520‐8109 USA

5. School of Geography, Geology & the Environment University of Leicester Leicester LE1 7RH UK

6. Department of Earth Sciences & Engineering Imperial College London London SW7 2BP UK

Abstract

AbstractThe three‐dimensionally preserved Haliestes dasos from the Silurian (Wenlock) Lagerstätte is the most complete fossil sea spider and the oldest unambiguous pycnogonid known from the fossil record. The discovery of two new specimens to add to the holotype reveals new features including proximal annulations of the appendages and segmentation of the trunk end, critical details for comparison with pycnogonids from the Devonian (Emsian) Hunsrück Slate and for the interpretation of the evolutionary significance of Palaeozoic genera. There is some evidence of sexual dimorphism. Haliestes dasos was nektobenthic and its morphology indicates an unusual mode of feeding compared with living pycnogonids. The new morphological features of H. dasos are closely similar to those in Palaeoisopus problematicus from the Hunsrück Slate and it clearly belongs, together with that species, in stem Pycnogonida and not the crown group.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Paleontology

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