Invavita
Genus of extinct pentastomid
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Invavita piratica is an extinct, parasitic species of tongue worm, provisionally assigned to the order Cephalobaenida, from Herefordshire Lagerstätte, Ludlow-aged England. [1] It possessed a head, a worm-like body, and two pairs of limbs.[2]
| Invavita Temporal range: Ludlow,
| |
|---|---|
| I. piratica (B-F) and its host, Nymphatelina gravida | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Class: | Ichthyostraca |
| Subclass: | Pentastomida |
| Order: | Cephalobaenida |
| Genus: | †Invavita Siveter et al., 2015 |
| Species: | †I. piratica |
| Binomial name | |
| †Invavita piratica Siveter et al., 2015 | |
The 425-million-year-old Silurian fossil holotype specimen was found still attached to its fossilised host, a specimen of the ostracod Nymphatelina gravida, at an undisclosed location in England.[3] It is now in Oxford University Museum of Natural History. It was first described in the journal Current Biology in 2015.[1]
Etymology
The generic name is a New Latin compound word combining "invasor" and "avitus," and roughly translates as "ancient intruder." The specific name refers to piracy; both names referring directly to the organism's obvious parasitic lifestyle.[1]