TY - JOUR
T1 - New Triassic asteroidea (echinodermata) specimens and their evolutionary significance
AU - Blake, Daniel B.
AU - Tintori, Andrea
AU - Kolar-Jurkovšek, Tea
N1 - Funding Information:
Villier L., Brayard A., Bylund K.G., Jenks J.F., Escarguel G., Olivier N., Stephen D.A., Vennin E. & Fara E. (2017) - Superstesaster promissor gen. et sp. nov., a new starfish (Echinodermata, Asteroidea) from the Early Triassic of Utah, USA, filling a major gap in the phylogeny of asteroids. J. Syst. Palaeontol., 2017 https://doi.org/10.1080 /14772019.2017.1308972 Acknowledgments. Excavations in the Northern Grigna have been supported from 2003 to 2009 by the Parco Regionale della Gri-gna Settentrionale: this specimen has been found during a further visit to the site on August 19, 2011 during the recording of a documentary by G. Cammarota. The Slovenian specimen was found during field works partly supported by the Slovenian Research Agency (programme number P1-0011). This is a contribution to the IGCP-Project 632 (“ Geologic and biotic events on the continent during the Jurassic/Cretaceous transition”). The photographs of the Slovenian specimen were taken by Dr Bogdan Jurkovšek (Ljubljana). The authors are indebted to C. Mah and two anonymous reviewers for useful comments, as well as to the handling editor F. Bosellini and the technical editor C. Lombardo.
PY - 2017/7
Y1 - 2017/7
N2 - The Paleozoic-Mesozoic transition saw the disappearance of asteroid stem groups and the ascent of the crown group, but late Paleozoic and Triassic asteroids are rare and transition events are poorly documented. Three new Middle and Late Triassic specimens augment existing data; included are a specimen of Trichasteropsis weissmanni from Germany, a specimen of Trichasteropsis? sp. indet. from Italy, and a possible member of the extant Poraniidae from Slovenia. Presence of a small ossicle at the interbrachial midline and adjacent to the marginal series of the new T. weissmanni specimen is consistent with similar expressions not only of other trichasteropsids but also occurrence of two interbrachial ossicles in Paleozoic, stem-group asterozoans; presence is in turn consistent with a hypothesis of derivation of the axillary/odontophore coupling from two ossicles rather than direct derivation of the crown-group odontophore from a single stem-group axillary. Morphology of Trichasteropsis? sp. indet., including, for example, the evenly-tapering arms are reminiscent of those of diverse crown-group asteroids whereas the enlarged distal arms of T. weissmanni are unique, the morphology of T? sp. indet. thereby potentially indicative of a plesiomorphic, stemward positioning within the Trichasteropsiidae. The range of the Poraniidae is tentatively extended to the Carnian. Similarities shared by the Poraniidae and the Trichasteropsiidae suggest stemward positioning within crown-group diversification; however, known Triassic fossils do not appear closely related to extant taxa identified in recent molecular studies as basal within the crown-group. A temperate climate is suggested as preferred by the Triassic asteroids rather than a tropical, warmer one.
AB - The Paleozoic-Mesozoic transition saw the disappearance of asteroid stem groups and the ascent of the crown group, but late Paleozoic and Triassic asteroids are rare and transition events are poorly documented. Three new Middle and Late Triassic specimens augment existing data; included are a specimen of Trichasteropsis weissmanni from Germany, a specimen of Trichasteropsis? sp. indet. from Italy, and a possible member of the extant Poraniidae from Slovenia. Presence of a small ossicle at the interbrachial midline and adjacent to the marginal series of the new T. weissmanni specimen is consistent with similar expressions not only of other trichasteropsids but also occurrence of two interbrachial ossicles in Paleozoic, stem-group asterozoans; presence is in turn consistent with a hypothesis of derivation of the axillary/odontophore coupling from two ossicles rather than direct derivation of the crown-group odontophore from a single stem-group axillary. Morphology of Trichasteropsis? sp. indet., including, for example, the evenly-tapering arms are reminiscent of those of diverse crown-group asteroids whereas the enlarged distal arms of T. weissmanni are unique, the morphology of T? sp. indet. thereby potentially indicative of a plesiomorphic, stemward positioning within the Trichasteropsiidae. The range of the Poraniidae is tentatively extended to the Carnian. Similarities shared by the Poraniidae and the Trichasteropsiidae suggest stemward positioning within crown-group diversification; however, known Triassic fossils do not appear closely related to extant taxa identified in recent molecular studies as basal within the crown-group. A temperate climate is suggested as preferred by the Triassic asteroids rather than a tropical, warmer one.
KW - Asteroidea
KW - Paleoenvironment
KW - Phylogeny
KW - Poraniidae
KW - Triassic
KW - Trichasteropsiidae
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M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85024857141
SN - 0035-6883
VL - 123
SP - 319
EP - 333
JO - Rivista, Italiana di Paleontologiia e Stratigrafia
JF - Rivista, Italiana di Paleontologiia e Stratigrafia
IS - 2
ER -