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Dinocaridida

Dinocaridida
Temporal range: Cambrian–Middle Devonian
Amplectobelua symbrachiata.jpg
Amplectobelua symbrachiata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Superphylum: Ecdysozoa
(unranked): Panarthropoda
(unranked): Lobopodia
Class: Dinocaridida
Collins, 1996
Subgroups

Dinocaridida is a proposed extinct taxon of fossil arthropod-like marine animals found, with one exception, in the Cambrian and Ordovician. It is subdivided into the anomalocaridids and the opabinids. The name of this group comes from Greek, "deinos" and "caris", meaning "terror shrimp" or "terror crab", due to their crustacean-like appearance and the hypotheses suggesting that members of this class were the apex predators of their time.

Dinocaridids are bilaterally symmetrical, with a non-mineralized cuticle and a body divided into two major tagmata, or body-sections. The frontal section have two claws found just in front of the mouth, which is located on these creatures' underside. The body will possess thirteen or more segments, each with its own gill branch and swimming lobe. It is thought that these lobes moved in an up-and-down motion to propel the animal forward in a fashion similar to the cuttlefish.

The placement of Dinocaridida is uncertain: they appear to be a stem group to arthropods. In some recent works they are grouped with other enigmatic forms in the phylum Lobopodia.

The group is geographically widespread, and has been reported from Cambrian strata in Canada, China and Russia, as well as the Ordovician of Morocco and Devonian of Germany.


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