Fieldia Temporal range:
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Stem group: | Priapulida (?) |
Class: | † Archaeopriapulida |
Family: | † Fieldiidae |
Genus: | †
Fieldia Walcott, 1912 |
Species | |
|
Fieldia (named after American businessman and financier Cyrus W. Field) [1] is a genus of worms known from the Cambrian Burgess Shale, and assigned to the priapulids. [2]
It was originally interpreted as an arthropod; its trunk bears a dense covering of spines, and its proboscis is small. [2] It fed on sea-floor mud, evidenced by the frequent presence of sediments preserved in its gut. [2] It reached 5 cm in length.
Along with the other Cambrian priapulids Ottoia, Selkirkia, Louisella, Ancalagon, Scolecofurca, and Lecythioscopa, the organism was originally classified into a clade termed the Archaeopriapulida, a stem group to the Priapulids proper. [3] However, the morphological similarity of these organisms to their modern cousins is remarkable, especially for the Burgess Shale, [4] and their similarity to the modern genus Maccabeus suggests that they are in the Seticoronaria stem group, and thus are true crown-group priapulids. [3] A phylogenetic analysis does not provide a great deal of resolution to the relationships between these basal worms. [5]
18 species of Fieldia are known from the Greater Phyllopod bed, where they comprise 0.03% of the community. [6]
Fieldia Temporal range:
| |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Stem group: | Priapulida (?) |
Class: | † Archaeopriapulida |
Family: | † Fieldiidae |
Genus: | †
Fieldia Walcott, 1912 |
Species | |
|
Fieldia (named after American businessman and financier Cyrus W. Field) [1] is a genus of worms known from the Cambrian Burgess Shale, and assigned to the priapulids. [2]
It was originally interpreted as an arthropod; its trunk bears a dense covering of spines, and its proboscis is small. [2] It fed on sea-floor mud, evidenced by the frequent presence of sediments preserved in its gut. [2] It reached 5 cm in length.
Along with the other Cambrian priapulids Ottoia, Selkirkia, Louisella, Ancalagon, Scolecofurca, and Lecythioscopa, the organism was originally classified into a clade termed the Archaeopriapulida, a stem group to the Priapulids proper. [3] However, the morphological similarity of these organisms to their modern cousins is remarkable, especially for the Burgess Shale, [4] and their similarity to the modern genus Maccabeus suggests that they are in the Seticoronaria stem group, and thus are true crown-group priapulids. [3] A phylogenetic analysis does not provide a great deal of resolution to the relationships between these basal worms. [5]
18 species of Fieldia are known from the Greater Phyllopod bed, where they comprise 0.03% of the community. [6]