A new scyphozoan from the Cambrian Fortunian Stage of South China

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Abstract

Animals with radial symmetry are abundant in the Cambrian Fortunian Stage of South China, but with relatively low diversity: representatives include Olivooides, Quadrapyrgites, carinachitiids, hexangulaconulariids and Pseudooides. Here, we report a new radial animal, Qinscyphus necopinus gen. et sp. nov., from the Fortunian small shelly fauna of southern Shaanxi Province, South China. Qinscyphus necopinus has a cup-shaped profile, with slightly raised annuli and five groups of triangular thickenings in pentaradial symmetry. This organism has a comparable morphology to, and thus a close affinity with, Olivooides and Quadrapyrgites, and is interpreted as a coronate scyphozoan. This discovery adds a new crown-group cnidarian to the Cambrian Explosion.

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Liu, Y., Shao, T., Zhang, H., Wang, Q., Zhang, Y., Chen, C., … Xue, J. (2017). A new scyphozoan from the Cambrian Fortunian Stage of South China. Palaeontology, 60(4), 511–518. https://doi.org/10.1111/pala.12306

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