Muensterellidae

Muensterellidae is a family of stem-octopod cephalopods from the Late Jurassic of Europe. Three genera are currently placed in this family, Muensterella, Celaenoteuthis, and Etchesia.

Muensterellidae
Temporal range: Kimmeridgian–Tithonian
Fossil of Muensterella scutellaris
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Suborder:
†Teudopseina
Superfamily:
†Muensterelloidea
Family:
Muensterellidae
Roger, 1952
Type species
Muensterella scutellaris
(Münster, 1842) Schevill, 1950
Subgroups

Phylogeny

Muensterellidae is one of three families in the superfamily Muensterelloidea along with the Patelloctopodidae and Enchoteuthididae. The muensterelloids are characterized by having a roughly spoon-shaped end of the gladius called the patella. This type of gladius is likely ancestral to the gladius remnants of modern octopuses.[1]

References

  1. Fuchs, D.; Schweigert, G. (2018). "First Middle–Late Jurassic gladius vestiges provide new evidence on the detailed origin of incirrate and cirrate octopuses (Coleoidea)". PalZ. 92: 203–217. doi:10.1007/s12542-017-0399-8.
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