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Phylum Porifera (Sponges) Cambrian to Recent Porifera are solitary or colonial animals with no mouth, anus, or digestive cavity. The body is composed of only two layers of cells separated by a jellylike substance containing amoeboid cells, which perform the functions of digestion, reproduction, and secretion of the skeleton. The skeleton is composed of organic fibers (collagen), mineral spicules (hydrous silica or calcite), and plates of calcium carbonate. 1. Most sponges are marine, but there are a few freshwater forms. 2. Most forms are cylindrical, but there are also encrusting forms. 3. Food consists of bacteria removed from water drawn into the body cavity through pores. 4. Not common as fossils because of poor preservation potential. Hydnoceras sp. Phylum Cnidaria (Coelenterata) Class Anthozoa (Corals) Ordovician to recent Corals are marine organisms with simple, two-layered structure. They are related to hydrozoans and jellyfish. Unlike those animals, corals secrete calcareous skeletons, and they have been important reef-builders throughout their history. Almost all modern colonial reef-building corals require warm, clear, shallow water because of their symbiotic relationship with algal cells. Order Rugosa Ordovician to Permian 1. Solitary horn corals or colonial. 2. Bilaterally symmetrical; septa arranged in multiples of four. Favistella alveolata Calceola sandalina Order Tabulata Ordovician to Permian 1. Exclusively colonial. 2. Composed of tubes in which tabulae are generally prominent, but septa are poorly developed or absent. Syringopora perelegans Order Scleractinia Middle Triassic to Recent 1. Solitary or colonial 2. External skeleton of aragonite. Coelosmilia cupuliformis Astrhelia palmata Phylum Bryozoa Ordovician to recent Bryozoans are small colonial animals with a simple U-shaped gut and an external skeleton of calcite or a flexible organic substance. Ciliated tentacles around the mouth draw food into the body cavity. Each organism lives in a structure called a zooecium. Each new individual arises from a “bud” of an existing bryozoan, and is assumed to be genetically identical to others in its colony. Bryozoans are common and widely distributed in modern oceans. 1. Most are marine; all are benthic, sessile, filter feeders. 2. Colonies may be encrusting, stick-like, massive (mounds), twig-like, or delicated branching fans. 3. The individual animals in the colonies are much smaller than those of corals. In addition, the openings in the bryozoan colonies (where the animal lived) lack the distinctive septa found in corals. Fenestella althaea Isotrypa ambigua Hallopora ramosa Phylum Brachiopoda Cambrian to Recent Brachiopods are bivalved marine invertebrates which filter food by means of a lophophore. The valves are composed of calcite which fossilize well. The valves are bilaterally symmetrical and are usually formed joined and closed. All varieties are benthic, although some are faunal and some are epifaunal. Brachiopods dominate the fossil record in the lower and middle Paleozoic. Cyclothyris velpertillo Terebratula wilmingtonensis Cyrtospirifer sp. Phylum Mollusca In the evolutionary sense, molluscs are a single group, however, they have adopted such different adaptive strategies (including skeletal structures) that the similarities are not obvious. Class Bivalvia (Pelecypoda) Ordovician to Recent Clams, oysters, scallops, mussels Bivalves are molluscs with two shells which are often mirror images of each other and protect soft body parts. Fossil (and dead) bivalve shells are commonly found separated because they automatically spring open at death. Bivalves are found in marine, brackish, and freshwater. Most occur in shallow water, but there are some deep-water forms. In general, bivalves do not make good index fossils, however they are good paleoecologic indicators, meaning that there are many different forms that have different life styles. For example, some are infaunal deposit feeders, others are epifaunal filter feeders, or sessile filter feeders, or vagile deposit feeders. Sessile forms may stay in one place or attach themselves to rocks or other shells with cement or threads. Vagile forms use a foot to crawl or burrow. A few, like pectens, “swim” by rapidly opening and closing their shells Ostrea titan Allorisma sp. Amnigenia sp. Inoceramus sp. Class Gastropoda Cambrian to Recent Snails, slugs, limpets The basic gastropod skeleton is a hollow, tapering, calcite tube, which may be straight, or coiled. They have a well developed head with sensory organs and a foot for locomotion. This group is the most adaptable of the molluscs as they can be herbivores, scavengers, and predators. Gastropods are found in marine, brackish, freshwater, and terrestrial environments. Pleurotomaria conidea Maclurea magna Olivia litterata Pterocerella sp. Buccinum clathratum Class Cephalopoda Late Cambrian to Recent Squid, octopus, chambered nautilus, ammonites, belemnoids In the past, cephalopods were an important and very successful group of marine predators and scavengers, and are the most advanced or all molluscs. Cephalopods are swift and agile swimmers with a defined head, elaborate sensory organs, and well developed eyes. They may or may not secrete a shell. Subclass Nautiloidea Nautiloids have straight, curved, or coiled calcite tubes that are divided into chambers by simple walls (septa). The joint where the septa and external wall meet is called the suture, which form rings around the shells. Nautiloids were common throughout the Paleozoic, however today Nautilus is the only living representative. Bickmorites bickmoreanum Nautilus lineatus Subclass Ammonoidea Ammonoid shells are similar in structure to nautiloid shells, however the suture patterns are more complex. Ammonoids frequently have external knobs, ridges, or other ornament. There are no living representatives of this class. Discoscaphites nebrascensis Muensteroceras oweni Subclass Coleoidea Squid, cuttlefish, octopus, belemnoids Coleoids have greatly reduced internal or missing skeletons. Fossil coleoids (belemnoids) had stout, cigar-shaped internal skeletons consisting of a chambered shell surrounded by a counterweight. Hibolites semihastatus Phylum Arthropoda Trilobites, insects, spiders, crustaceans, ostracodes Class Trilobita Early Cambrian to Late Permian Trilobites are members of the phylum arthropoda, which means they have segmented bodies, jointed appendages, and jointed external skeletons, and grow by molting. They are a class of extinct arthropods in which the body is divisible into three parallel lobes. Trilobites are the earliest known arthropods and were exclusively marine. Most were benthic, vagile, epifaunal scavengers and deposit feeders. They are the first organisms known to have eyes, and were the dominant invertebrates in the Paleozoic. Trilobites are useful for biostratigraphy and world-wide correlation. Ptychagnostus praecurrens Agraulos ceticephalus Olenellus getzi Ellipsocephalus hoffi Calymene blumenbachi Phylum Echinodermata Cambrian to Recent Sea Urchins, Star fish, Crinoids Echinoderms are marine animals characterized by five-fold symmetry and a skeleton composed of individual plates. This group is highly diversified and successful Class Crinoidea Cambrian to Recent Crinoids, sea lilies Most crinoids are epifaunal, filter feeders that were sessile, and attached to the seafloor by a stem. The stem is composed of button-like discs that were stacked and held together by ligament fibers. The plates of the skeleton disarticulate upon death so complete skeletons are rare. Stems are more common than crowns. Crinoids were especially common in the Mississippian and much less common in the Mesozoic and Cenozoic. Barycrinus hoveyi Pachylocrinus aequalis Class Blastoidea Ordovician to Permian All blastoids are attached by stems and lived in shallow water in reefs. Blastoids have well developed 5-fold symmetry and were most abundant in the Mississippian. Crowns are found more often than stems. Pentremites sulcatus Deltoblastus verbeeki Phylum Chordata Class Graptolithina Cambrian to Mississippian Graptolites are small, extinct colonial invertebrates which had chitinous skeletons. They may have distant affinities to vertebrates. Graptolites are most commonly found as carbon impressions in black shales. Diplograptus foliaceus Didymograptus denticulatus