A New Brittle Star from the Early Carboniferous of Poland and Its Implications on Paleozoic Modern-Type Ophiuroid Systematics

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Abstract

The fossil record of Paleozoic ophiuroids includes a number of forms which share striking similarities with modern relatives in terms of skeletal morphology. These so called modern-type Paleozoic ophiuroids yield an enormous potential for a better understanding of ophiuroid evolution, yet the scarcity of accurate and sufficiently detailed morphological descriptions available to date precludes any further-reaching assessments. Here, we describe an articulated ophiuroid specimen from the Late Tournaisian (early Carboniferous) of Czatkowice quarry, southern Poland, as a new species Aganaster jagiellonicus sp. nov. The good preservation of the specimen allowed for a morphological analysis at a level comparable to recent ophiuroid descriptions. It shows remarkable morphological similarities with extant former ophiolepidids Ophiomusium and Ophiosphalma. The new find thus contributes to a solid basis for future investigations on the position of the modern-type Paleozoic ophiuroid in the phylogeny of the class.

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Thuy, B., Kutscher, M., & Płachno, B. J. (2015). A New Brittle Star from the Early Carboniferous of Poland and Its Implications on Paleozoic Modern-Type Ophiuroid Systematics. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 60(4), 923–929. https://doi.org/10.4202/app.00093.2014

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