Cyclopyge (trilobite) explained

Cyclopyge is a genus of small to average size trilobites that lived during the Ordovician. Like all members of the family Cyclopigidae, it has very large convex eyes, that cover most of the free cheeks, and in some species touch each other. The eyes almost touch the large glabella. The occipital ring has merged with the rest of the glabella. The glabella does not extend into a frontal thorn. The cephalon lacks genal spines. The 6 thorax segments have short pleurae. The pygidium is rather large, and often rather effaced. These are features that also occur in other Cyclopygidae, and are indications of a pelagic lifestyle.[1]

Taxonomy

The genus was first named Egle by Barrande, but that name was not available, since it was used by Robineau-Desvoidy before for a willow catkin fly of the Anthomyiidae family.

Species previously assigned to Cyclopyge

Species that may be confused with Cyclopyge

Distribution

As pelagic creatures, cyclogygids were not bound to shallow waters surrounding continents and islands. At the time they lived, continents weren't blocking the exchange between different parts of the ocean, and this means they probably had large distributions, comprising one or more climate zones worldwide. Cyclopyge is well known from the Czech Republic, Morocco, England, Sweden, Canada (Newfoundland) and the United States.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Whittington, H. B. et al. Part O, Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Revised, Volume 1 – Trilobita – Introduction, Order Agnostida, Order Redlichiida. 1997
  2. Zhou Zhiyi . Zhou Zhiqiang . 2009 . Ordovician cyclopygid trilobites from the Pagoda Formation of southwestern Shaanxi, China . AAP Memoir . 37 . 87–101 . https://archive.today/20130620025724/http://159.226.74.248:8000/bbzl_view.jsp?wztm=Ordovician+cyclopygid+trilobites+from+the+Pagoda+Formation+of+southwestern+Shaanxi,+China . dead . 20 June 2013 . 7 June 2013 .