Abstract

Biometric analyses of the trilobite Cyamella stensioei Owens, 1979, from carbonate mud mounds of the Upper Ordovician Boda Limestone of central Sweden, along with a comparison of closely allied rorringtoniid taxa from outside Baltoscandia, reveal important systematic and ecological information on this proetide taxon. Biometric analysis of the cephala of C. stensioei shows a number of instars, reflecting several ontogenetic stages, and a meraspis stage of this taxon is figured for the first time. C. stensioei is exclusively found in mass accumulations in the former, open cavities of the carbonate mud mound and was therefore most likely a cavity-dweller, possibly adapted to this lifestyle through chemosymbiosis. Some of the cavities are interpreted as former seepage conduits. Comparison of C. stensioei with other rorringtoniid trilobites suggests possible ancestors occurring in South China and Sibumasu terranes, determined earlier as Decoroproetus sp. and Cyamella sp., all differing from the genus Paracyamella, which is reassessed here. In wider terms of ancestry, they originate from Baltica or Laurentia, where the first rorringtoniids are known from the middle Darriwilian.

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