Discinisca
Appearance
Discinisca Temporal range:
| |
---|---|
Discinisca lamellosa, a group of old and young specimens; the largest showing the foramen in the peduncle valve; the rest showing brachial valves | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Brachiopoda |
Order: | Discinida |
Family: | Discinidae |
Genus: | Discinisca Sowerby, 1822 |
Species | |
|
Discinisca is a genus of brachiopods with fossils dating back from the Early Devonian to the Pliocene of Africa, Europe, North America, and New Zealand.[1]
Living individuals incorporate tablets of silica into their shell.[2]
References
- ^ Christian Emig (2010). Emig CC (ed.). "Discinisca Dall, 1871". World Brachiopoda database. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved February 25, 2012.
- ^ Williams, A; Cusack, M; Buckman, J. O.; Stachel, T (1998). "Siliceous tablets in the larval shells of apatitic discinid brachiopods". Science. 279 (5359): 2094–6. PMID 9516107.
- Fossils (Smithsonian Handbooks) by David Ward (Page 92)
- Emig, Christian (2006). Systematics of extant brachiopod taxa
External links
- Discinisca in the Paleobiology Database
Categories:
- Discinida
- Devonian brachiopods
- Carboniferous brachiopods
- Permian brachiopods
- Triassic brachiopods
- Jurassic brachiopods
- Cretaceous brachiopods
- Paleocene animals
- Eocene animals
- Miocene animals
- Pliocene animals
- Prehistoric animals of Africa
- Prehistoric animals of Europe
- Prehistoric animals of North America
- Early Devonian first appearances
- Pliocene extinctions
- Prehistoric brachiopod genera
- Oligocene invertebrates
- Brachiopod stubs
- Cretaceous animal stubs