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Articles

Phylogeny of the Ordovician and Silurian members of the order Atrypida

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Article: 2145920 | Received 11 May 2022, Accepted 14 Oct 2022, Published online: 19 Dec 2022
 

Abstract

Brachiopods belonging to order Atrypida originated in the Middle Ordovician and went extinct in the Late Devonian. Few cladistic studies have been undertaken for this group. Here we investigate their early evolution through Silurian time. We present a parsimony-based phylogenetic analysis of 41 characters and 70 genera representing all the early taxonomic groups within the order. The stratigraphical record of the fossil genera analysed strongly aligns with the phylogeny recovered from our parsimony analysis. Most currently recognized subfamilies and families may be identified within clades, except for the Atrypinae, Idiospirinae, and the Septatrypidae. This warrants subdivision of the former and redefinition of the latter two. The subfamily Atrypinae is redefined, and a new subfamily of the Atrypidae, the Protatrypinae, is split off. Tracing character evolution across the tree indicates that the calcified spiralia and a jugum or jugal processes characterize all members of the Atrypida, except the most basal clade, the Cyclospiridae, which lacks a calcified jugum. Ribs are a homoplasious character, occurring in numerous clades throughout the tree. Darriwillian through Sandbian ages represent times with rapid evolution when most new autapomorphies seen in the atrypides evolved. This interval is the first major part of the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event (GOBE). Solid teeth, dorsal direction of spiralia, elaborate ornamentation, and frills evolved in the latest Katian into early Silurian time. Solid teeth seen in distantly related clades from latest Katian onwards may be an analogous feature. The Late Ordovician Mass Extinction (LOME) is indicated in the stratigraphical tree together with a possible event at the end of the Aeronian. The tree supports the long-held assumptions that the Plectatrypinae evolved from the Spirigerininae. It further suggests that the genus Tuvaella may be included with the Davidsonioidea. Likewise, the redefined Atrypinae is a sister group of the Lissatrypidae and a derived group in the phylogenetic tree.

Acknowledgements

First and foremost, we thank Dr Adam T. Halamski and an anonymous reviewer for their thorough and helpful reviews. Bing Huang would like to acknowledge support from the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (grant no. XDB26000000). We thank Robin Cocks for providing access to information on the Kelleridae from the proofs of Popov et al. (Citation2021). Luana Maroja is grateful to Williams College for financial support.

Supplemental material

Supplemental material for this article can be accessed here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14772019.2022.2145920.

Associate Editor: Katie Collins

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