Palæos: Palaeos Home Page Cnidaria
INVERTEBRATES Tabulata

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Subclass Tabulata

Furongian? / Early Ordovician to Late Permian


Tabulates are a Paleozoic group of corals that produce calcite skeletons of varying shapes.  Unlike the contemporary Rugose corals, they are always colonial, and never found as solitary forms, and the individual corallites are small.

The group takes its name from the organization of the colony. It is built around prominant horizontal "floors" or tabulae. Other skeletal elements, such as septa, are reduced or absent. Because of this it has even been suggested that these are not corals at all, but a type of extinct algae.

The larger tabulates were important reef-builders, being found in association with Stromatoporoids. Some species, like the well known Favosites, form mound-like colonies, but there are also sheet-like, branching, and chain-like forms.

The usual classification is as follows:

Subclass Tabulata 
               Order Chaetetida 
               Order Tetradiida 
               Order Sarcinulida 
               Order Heliolitida 
               Order Halysitida 
               Order Auloporida




References and Links

Introduction to the Tabulata

Corals - Kansas Fossils

Tabulata

E.N.K. Clarkson, Invertebrate Paleontology and Evolution


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page by M. Alan Kazlev
page last modified 2 May 2003
ATW020819