Beidazoon

Extinct species of Cambrian organism From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Beidazoon venustum is a marine deuterostome from the group Vetulicolia. It originates from the lower Cambrian Chengjiang biota of Yunnan Province, China, and was discovered in 2005. It is known as the smallest described vetulicolian, and for its surface being covered in many small nodes.[2]

Phylum:Chordata
Clade?:Vetulicolia
Class:Vetulicolida
Order:Vetulicolata
Quick facts Scientific classification, Binomial name ...
Beidazoon
Temporal range: 535–520 Ma
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade?: Vetulicolia
Class: Vetulicolida
Order: Vetulicolata
Family: Vetulicolidae
Genus: Beidazoon
Species:
B. venustum
Binomial name
Beidazoon venustum
Shu, 2005
Synonyms[1]

Bullivetula variola Aldridge et al., 2007

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Description

Beidazoon venustum had a hard outer shell similar to Vetulicola, with a single band mouth. Its tail is asymmetrical and composed of a hard shell extending from the upper posterior, an axial lobe of seven segments, and a ventral lobe with four or five segments.[3] According to its discoverer, Beidazoon's shell was "beautifully ornamented with numerous nodes".[4]

Taxonomy

The family Beidazoonidae was erected to house Beidazoon at the time of its discovery.[3] However, Beidazoon's junior synonym Bullivetula was assigned to Vetulicolidae,[5] and other authors have accepted that assignment for Beidazoon.[6]

One 2024 study found Beidazoon to be nestled within Vetulicola as a sister to V. monile within a monophyletic Vetulicolidae:[7]

Vetulicolidae

An earlier study in 2014 treated Vetulicola as monophyletic, but was unable to resolve any relationships among vetulicolians as a group:[8]

References

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