Lophotrochozoa Palaeos Home Page Linguliformea
BRACHIOPODA Acrotretida

 

Acrotretida

(Early Cambrian to Recent)

 

Acrotreta
Acrotreta idahoensis Walcott
shell diameter - 2.5 mm
Furongian
image from Moore, Lalicker and Fischer, Invertebrate Fossils, McGraw-Hill Book Company Inc, 1952, p.224

Appearing in the earliest Cambrian (Tommotian epoch), these are among the very first hard-shelled organisms.  Through their long history (spanning the entire Phanerozoic) they remain quite distinct from other inarticulate brachiopods.

Acrotretids are usually round with a convex, cap-shaped brachial valve, and a flat pedicle valve.  They resemble the paterinids in general outline and very small size, but are distinguished by calcium carbonate shell, the more distinctly conical form of the pedicle valve and particularly the presence of a minute pedicle foramen, located at or just behind the apex.  The posterior slope of the pedicle valve commonly bears a distinct trough; but because the pedicle does not emerge at the base of this trough, next to the valve margin, the indentation cannot be interpreted to denote pressure of the pedicle against the outer side of the valve.

Life posture of Acrotreta is shown at the left.  The pedicle emerges from a rounded opening between the apex of the pedicle valve and the nearest shell margin.

The basal acrotretids were most common from the early Cambrian to Late Ordovician, with a  few stragglers managing to continue on until the Devonian (Frasnian epoch), when they died out, along with many other forms of life in the Frasnian-Famennian mass extinction. One specialized group, the Discinida, remain.

Systematics

In non-cladistic schemes, there is only one superfamily.

Acrotretoidea (Early Cambrian-Devonian)






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page uploaded 7 June 2002
checked ATW060125
(originally uploaded on Kheper site uploaded 11 May 1999)
page © M. Alan Kazlev 1999-2002
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