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Revised systematics of Palaeozoic ‘horseshoe crabs’ and the myth of monophyletic Xiphosura
Lamsdell, J.C. (2013). Revised systematics of Palaeozoic ‘horseshoe crabs’ and the myth of monophyletic Xiphosura. Zool. J. Linn. Soc. 167(1): 1-27. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2012.00874.x
In: Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. Academic Press: London. ISSN 0024-4082; e-ISSN 1096-3642, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Eukaryotes > Animals > Invertebrates > Arthropods > Merostomata > Xiphosura
    Phylogenetics
    Prosomapoda; Synziphosurina
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Ghost ranges; Prosomapoda; Paraphyly; Synziphosurines; Tagmosis

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  • Lamsdell, J.C.

Abstract
    The monophyly of the class Xiphosura is critically re-examined. For the first time a phylogenetic analysis of a number of synziphosurine and xiphosurid taxa is performed together with representatives of the other chelicerate orders also included as ingroup taxa. Xiphosura as currently defined is shown to be paraphyletic, and a revised classification is presented. Previous characteristics used to unite the xiphosurids (possessing a fused thoracetron) and a paraphyletic grade of synziphosurines (retaining freely articulating opisthosomal tergites) include the presence of a cardiac lobe, ophthalmic ridges, an axial region of the opisthosoma, and a reduced first opisthosomal segment. All of these characteristics are, however, here shown to be present in other chelicerate groups, leaving Xiphosura without any defining synapomorphies. A number of other characters, including the form of the chelicerae and appendage VII, indicate that xiphosurans may be paraphyletic with respect to a clade consisting of chasmataspidids, eurypterids, and arachnids. What ramifications this has for the evolution of basal chelicerates is briefly discussed, and it is recognized that most of the currently known ‘synziphosurine’ taxa represent offshoots from the main chelicerate lineage with ghost ranges extending into at least the Middle Ordovician.

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