Furca (Latin for "fork") is an extinct genus of marrellomorph arthropod known from the Sandbian stage (upper Ordovician period) of the Czech Republic,[1] with a single currently described species, Furca bohemica. A tentative additional species, "Furca mauretanica": was proposed for specimens discovered in Morocco, but this species remains a nomen nudum until formally published, and probably belongs in a new separate genus.

Furca
Temporal range: Upper Ordovician 458–453 Ma
Reconstruction of Furca bohemica
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Marrellomorpha
Order: Marrellida
Genus: Furca
Fritsch, 1908
Type species
Furca bohemica
Fritsch, 1908
Species

Furca bohemica Fritsch, 1908
"Furca mauretanica" Van Roy, 2006 (nomen nudum)

Description edit

Furca is characterized by a broad head shield with three pairs of prominent spines: front (anterolateral), side (mediolateral) and rear (posterolateral). The head shield of Furca ranged from 21–31 mm (0.83–1.22 in) long and 18–29 mm (0.71–1.14 in) at maximum width. The mediolateral spines are long and strongly curved. The outline of the head shield possess a fringe of small, gently curving secondary spines, between 1.5–7 mm (0.059–0.276 in) long. Appendages are unknown from fossils.[2]

Paleobiology edit

Furca fossils have been found in sediments indicative of shallow marine habitats. Since appendages and other body parts are unknown, no firm conclusions can be made of the biology of Furca. However, comparisons to other marrellomorphs and living arthropods such as horseshoe crabs suggest a benthic marine lifestyle: dwelling on the sea floor.[2]

Classification edit

 
Marrellomorph phylogeny from Rak et al., 2013[2]
 
Fossil of "Furca" mauritanica, currently a nomen nudum that likely belongs in a new genus

With its unusual anatomy, Furca has a colorful taxonomic history. The first specimens were discovered by Joachim Barrande, who named them Furca bohemica (Latin for "Bohemian fork") but did not formally publish descriptions. The specimens were not illustrated until 1847, when they were interpreted as the hypostome of the trilobite Prionocheilus. Antonin Fritsch was the first to formally describe Furca as a distinct taxon, interpreting F. bohemica as a larval echinoderm in 1908.[3][4] In 1919, F. bohemica was, for the first time, interpreted as an arthropod. A second species, F. pilosa was described in 1999, as well as an unnamed species simply called "Furca sp.". In 2013, Rak and colleagues suggested that F. pilosa and all previously named species were synonyms of Furca bohemica.[2]

A tentative additional species, "Furca mauretanica" from the Floian stage Fezouata Formation of Morocco, was proposed in a doctoral thesis in 2006[5] and subsequently referred to as "probably belonging to the genus Furca".[6] However, the name has yet to be formally published and so remains a nomen nudum. Phylogenetic analyses have recovered it as distinct marrelid taxon not closely related to Furca bohemica, and thus probably should be placed in a separate genus.[7]

Furca bohemica is assigned to the marrellomorph clade Marrellida.[2] While historicaly placed in Mimetasteridae alongside Mimetaster, other studies have disputed this placement.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ Rak, Štěpán (2009). "Výskyt netrilobitových členovců v křemencích letenského souvrství v okolí Berouna [The occurrence of non-trilobite arthropods from the quartzites of Letná Formation from the vicinity of Beroun". Geologie, paleontologie, speleologie - Český kras XXXV (PDF) (in Czech and English). pp. 14–25. ISBN 9788090347748.
  2. ^ a b c d e Rak, Štĕpán; Ortega-Hernández, Javier; Legg, David A. (2013). "A revision of the Late Ordovician marellomorph arthropod Furca bohemica from Czech Republic". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. doi:10.4202/app.2011.0038.
  3. ^ Fritsch, A. 1908. Problematica silurica. In: J. Barrande (ed.), Système silurien du centre de la Bohême. 28 pp. Bellman, Prague
  4. ^ Fritsch, A. (1908). "Über eine Echinodermenlarve aus dem Untersilur Böhmens". Zoologischer Anzeiger. 31: 797–798.
  5. ^ Van Roy, P. 2006. Non-trilobite Arthropods from the Ordovician of Morocco. 230 pp. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Ghent University, Ghent
  6. ^ Van Roy, Peter; Orr, Patrick J.; Botting, Joseph P.; Muir, Lucy A.; Vinther, Jakob; Lefebvre, Bertrand; Hariri, Khadija el; Briggs, Derek E. G. (2010). "Ordovician faunas of Burgess Shale type" (PDF). Nature. 465 (7295): 215–218. Bibcode:2010Natur.465..215V. doi:10.1038/nature09038. PMID 20463737. S2CID 4313285.
  7. ^ a b Moysiuk, Joseph; Izquierdo-López, Alejandro; Kampouris, George E.; Caron, Jean-Bernard (July 2022). "A new marrellomorph arthropod from southern Ontario: a rare case of soft-tissue preservation on a Late Ordovician open marine shelf". Journal of Paleontology. 96 (4): 859–874. doi:10.1017/jpa.2022.11. ISSN 0022-3360.