Craniidae Explained
The Craniidae are a family of brachiopods, the only surviving members of the subphylum Craniiformea. They are the only members of the order Craniida, the monotypic suborder Craniidina, and the superfamily Cranioidea; consequently, the latter two taxa are at present redundant and rarely used.There are three living genera within Craniidae: Neoancistrocrania, Novocrania, and Valdiviathyris. As adults, craniids either live freely on the ocean floor or, more commonly, cement themselves onto a hard object with all or part of the ventral valve.
Like the burrowing lingulids, Craniids are inarticulate brachiopods. There are no outgrowths forming a hinge between both valves, nor is there any support for the lophophore. Unlike lingulids, which have shells consisting of apatite and organic material, craniids have shells composed mainly of calcium carbonate. No craniids are known to bear a pedicle at any development stage.[1]
Evolution
Extinct craniids
Most craniid genera are extinct, known only from fossils like other craniiforms. Craniids first appeared in the later part of the Tremadocian, the first stage of the Lower Ordovician. In the Lower Ordovician, they were mostly restricted to peri-Gondwanan terranes (modern central Europe) in the South Polar region. By the Middle Ordovician, they had spread northwards to Baltica. In the Late Ordovician, their range expanded eastwards to Avalonia before crossing the Iapetus Ocean to Laurentia.[2]
Craniid diversity and abundance was respectable but still fairly low during the Late Ordovician, and even lower through the rest of the Paleozoic. The craniid fossil record is patchy, with fossils unknown from the Upper Carboniferous, Upper Permian, and the entire Triassic. They reappear in the Oxfordian stage of the Late Jurassic and briefly regain their Ordovician level of diversity in the Late Cretaceous.[3]
Living craniids
Craniids are remarkable for their slow rate of evolution.[4] Approximately 11[5] species of this 480-million-year-old lineage still survive today, with minimal differences relative to their fossil counterparts. One species, Valdiviathyris quenstedti, has remained essentially unchanged for the last 35 million years or so. Although some evolution would have taken place in the meantime, this was essentially silent mutations and marginal adaptations to cooler habitat. Present-day Valdiviathyris are indistinguishable from fossils of the Late Eocene, and the genus cannot even be divided into chronospecies. V. quenstedti can be considered a living fossil and one of the oldest and most long-lived species known to science.
Valdiviathyris and Neoancistrocrania have occasionally been separated into their own family, Valdiviathyrididae, though few authors follow this suggestion.[6] Craniscus has sometimes been cited as a fourth living craniid genus,[7] based on "Craniscus japonica", a putative species from waters off Japan. Genetic evidence has clarified this misconception, revealing that "Craniscus japonica" actually represents a misattributed species of Neoancistrocrania.
List of genera
From the Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology Part H, Revised (unless stated otherwise):[8]
- †Acanthocrania Williams, 1943 [Upper Ordovician ("[[Caradoc (age)|Caradoc]]") – Lower Carboniferous]
- †Ancistrocrania Dall, 1877 = Cranopsis [Upper Cretaceous ([[Coniacian]]) – Paleocene (Danian?)]
- †Celidocrania Liu, Xhy, & Xue, 1985 [Middle Ordovician] (possible synonym of Acanthocrania)
- †Crania Retzius, 1781 [Upper Cretaceous ([[Campanian]] – Maastrichtian)]
- †Craniscus Dall, 1871 [Upper Jurassic ([[Oxfordian (stage)|Oxfordian]])]
- †Conocrania Smirnova, 1996 [Lower Cretaceous ([[Berriasian]] – Valanginian)]
- †Danocrania Rozenkrantz, 1964 [Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) – Paleocene (Danian?)]
- †Deliella Halamski, 2004 [Lower Devonian ([[Emsian]]) – Middle Devonian (Givetian)]
- †Isocrania Jäkel, 1902 [Upper Cretaceous (Campanian) – Paleocene (Danian?)]
- †Lepidocrania Cooper and Grant, 1974 [<nowiki/>[[Lower Permian]]]
- †Mesocrania Smirnova, 1997 [Upper Jurassic (Oxfordian) – Lower Cretaceous (Berriasian)]
- †Nematocrania Grant, 1976 [Lower Permian ([[Artinskian]])]
- Neoancistrocrania Laurin, 1992
- Novocrania Lee and Bruton, 2001 = Neocrania
- †Orthisocrania Rowell, 1963 [Ordovician]
- †Petrocrania Raymond, 1911 [Lower Ordovician (Tremadocian)<ref name=":02" /> – Lower Carboniferous]
- †Philhedra Koken, 1889[9] [Ordovician]
- †Pseudocrania McCoy, 1851 [Lower Ordovician ("Arenig")]
- Valdiviathyris Helmcke, 1940[10]
Notes and References
- Book: Moore, R.C.. 1965. Brachiopoda. Geological Society of America/University of Kansas Press. Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part H., Volume 1. H6, H93. Boulder, Colorado/Lawrence, Kansas. 0-8137-3015-5.
- Popov . Leonid E. . Holmer . Lars E. . Bassett . Michael G. . Pour . Mansoureh Ghobadi . Percival . Ian G. . 2013 . Harper . D.A.T. . Servais . T. . Chapter 10: Biogeography of Ordovician linguliform and craniiform brachiopods . Geological Society, London, Memoirs . Early Palaeozoic Biogeography and Palaeogeography . en . 38 . 1 . 117–126 . 10.1144/M38.10 . 0435-4052. free .
- Book: Curry, Gordon B. . Part H, Brachiopoda (Revised). Volume 6: Supplement . Brunton . Howard C. . Geological Society of America; University of Kansas . 2007 . 978-0-8137-3136-0 . Selden . Paul A. . . Boulder, Colorado; Lawrence, Kansas . 2901–2965 . Chapter 9: Stratigraphic Distribution of Brachiopods . https://journals.ku.edu/InvertebratePaleo/article/view/5523/4996.
- Book: Cohen, Bernard L. . Long . Sarah L . Saito . Michiko . 2008 . Wiley-Blackwell . 978-1-4051-8664-3 . Harper . David A.T. . Fossils and Strata . 54 . 283–287 . en . Living craniids: preliminary molecular evidence of their inter-relationships . 10.18261/9781405186643-2008-31 . Long . Sarah L. . Nielsen . Claus . https://www.idunn.no/doi/abs/10.18261/9781405186643-2008-31.
- Web site: Emig . Christian C. . Bitner . Maria Aleksandra . Álvarez . Fernando . Craniiformea . 7 June 2023 . Brachiopoda Database.
- Robinson . Jeffrey H. . Lee . Daphne E. . 2007-03-01 . The recent and Paleogene craniid brachiopod, Valdiviathyris quenstedti Helmcke, 1940 . Systematics and Biodiversity . 5 . 1 . 123–131 . 10.1017/S1477200006002179 . 1477-2000.
- Book: Bassett, Michael G. . Part H, Brachiopoda (Revised). Volume 6: Supplement . Geological Society of America; University of Kansas . 2007 . 978-0-8137-3136-0 . Selden . Paul A. . . Boulder, Colorado; Lawrence, Kansas . 2591–2592 . Chapter 4 (part): Craniida . https://journals.ku.edu/InvertebratePaleo/article/view/5518/4991.
- Book: Bassett, Michael G. . Part H, Brachiopoda (Revised). Volumes 2 & 3: Linguliformea, Craniiformea, and Rhynchonelliformea (part) . Geological Society of America; University of Kansas . 2000 . 0-8137-3108-9 . Kaesler . Roger L. . . Boulder, Colorado; Lawrence, Kansas . 169–183 . Chapter 2 (part): Craniida . https://journals.ku.edu/InvertebratePaleo/article/view/5207/4685.
- Brunton . C.H.C. . Silicified brachiopods from the Visean of County Fermanagh (II) . Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Geology . 1968 . 16 . 8 .
- Christian C.. Emig. Nummulus brattenburgensis and Crania craniolaris (Brachiopoda, Craniidae). Carnets de Géologie. 2009. 08. 2014-08-05. 2016-03-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304052229/http://paleopolis.rediris.es/cg/CG2009_A08/CG2009_A08.pdf. dead.