A phylogenetically related group of variably well-known Ordovician trilobites have in the past been assigned to six separate genera and a number of families, and their taxonomic cohesiveness has not always been recognized. When most of them have been understood to form an evolutionarily related group, they have historically most often been assigned to the genus Agerina Tjernvik, 1956, and assigned initially to Bathyuridae Walcott, 1886, and more recently to Leiostegiidae Bradley, 1925. The systematics of this group is revised, and its 25 formally named species are assigned to four potentially monophyletic genera. Ontogenetic information from a new silicified species, together with some adult morphology, demonstrates that the group is unambiguously related to the Ordovician family Phillipsinellidae Whittington, 1950, to which it is assigned as a suite of less derived genera. The new genus Forteyaspis (type species Forteyaspis idoli sp. nov. from the Darriwilian of western Newfoundland, Canada) is proposed for four Laurentian species, and other species are assigned to the genera Agerina, Brackebuschia Harrington and Leanza, 1957, and Hexianella Zhang in Qiu et al. Other new species are Agerina boygeorgei (Floian, Nevada, USA) and Forteyaspis adamanti (Floian, western Newfoundland, Canada). Forteyaspis norrisi (Ludvigsen, 1980) is photographically revised.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Research Article|
February 04, 2022
The phylogenetic affinity of the Ordovician trilobites Agerina, Forteyaspis gen. nov., and related genera, with new and revised species from Canada and the United States Available to Purchase
Talia S. Karim;
Talia S. Karim
a
University of Colorado Museum of Natural History, 265 UCB, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA.
Search for other works by this author on:
Jonathan M. Adrain
b
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Iowa, 115 Trowbridge Hall, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA.Corresponding author: Jonathan M. Adrain (email: [email protected]).
Search for other works by this author on:
Talia S. Karim
a
University of Colorado Museum of Natural History, 265 UCB, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA.Corresponding author: Jonathan M. Adrain (email: [email protected]).
Publisher: Canadian Science Publishing
Received:
27 Sep 2021
Accepted:
17 Nov 2021
First Online:
16 Mar 2022
Online ISSN: 1480-3313
Print ISSN: 0008-4077
The Author(s)
Permission for reuse (free in most cases) can be obtained from copyright.com.
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2022) 59 (3): 156–179.
Article history
Received:
27 Sep 2021
Accepted:
17 Nov 2021
First Online:
16 Mar 2022
Citation
Talia S. Karim, Jonathan M. Adrain; The phylogenetic affinity of the Ordovician trilobites Agerina, Forteyaspis gen. nov., and related genera, with new and revised species from Canada and the United States. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences 2022;; 59 (3): 156–179. doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjes-2021-0105
Download citation file:
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Email alerts
Index Terms/Descriptors
- Arthropoda
- Canada
- Eastern Canada
- exoskeletons
- Great Northern Peninsula
- Lander County Nevada
- morphology
- Nevada
- new names
- new taxa
- Newfoundland
- Newfoundland and Labrador
- ontogeny
- Ordovician
- Paleozoic
- revision
- taxonomy
- Trilobita
- Trilobitomorpha
- United States
- Valmy Formation
- Table Cove Formation
- Shallow Bay Formation
- Phillipsinellidae
- Agerina
- Crum Canyon
- Agerina boygeorgei
- Forteyaspis
Latitude & Longitude
Citing articles via
Related Articles
Systematics of some Late Ordovician encrinurine trilobites from Laurentian North America
Journal of Paleontology
Pseudocryptic species of the Middle Cambrian trilobite Eodiscus Hartt, in Walcott, 1884, from Avalonian and Laurentian Newfoundland
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
Related Book Content
The effect of environmental changes on the evolution and extinction of Late Devonian trilobites from the northern Canning Basin, Western Australia
Devonian Climate, Sea Level and Evolutionary Events
Terminal Ediacaran–Late Ordovician evolution of the NE Laurentia palaeocontinent: rift–drift–onset of Taconic Orogeny, sea-level change and ‘Hawke Bay’ onlap (not offlap)
Supercontinents, Orogenesis and Magmatism
Devonian Stratigraphy and Paleontology of the Roberts Mountains Region, Nevada
Devonian Stratigraphy and Paleontology of The Roberts Mountains Region, Nevada
Biomere boundaries: A possible test for extraterrestrial perturbation of the biosphere
Geological Implications of Impacts of Large Asteroids and Comets on the Earth