Schramidontus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Schramidontus
Temporal range: Famennian, 358.9–372.2 Ma
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Subphylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Schramidontus

Gueriau, Charbonnier & Clément, 2014
Type species
Schramidontus labensis
Gueriau, Charbonnier & Clément, 2014

Schramidontus is a genus of crustaceans from the Late Devonian period found in Strud, Belgium, closely related to Angustidontus and classified as part of the order Angustidontida. It is an important genus because of its position in the eumalacostracan family tree and the insight study of the genus may give of the origin of the Decapoda. The generic name derives from Frederick Schram, who helped the scientific community in the field of the Palaeozoic malacostracans and the suffix -idontus in relation to the similarities between Schramidontus and Angustidontus. The specific name is from Labas, a stream that flows near Strud quarry, where the genus was discovered.[1]

Schramidontus had a subcylindrical smooth carapace and a triangular telson. It had two pairs of grasping maxillipeds, the second being twice as big as the first, that it could use to bring prey to the maxillae, maxillulae and its large mandibles. This feature was not present in its only close relative, Angustidontus, which probably used its maxillipeds to hit and hold its prey. In addition, Schramidontus had six pairs of pereiopods. The first five were subchelated, short and ending in a hooked dactylus, and the last pair was shorter and narrower with a small simple dactylus.[1]

Classification

Paleoecology

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI