Jy. Rong et Rb. Zhan, BRACHIDIA OF LATE ORDOVICIAN AND SILURIAN EOSPIRIFERINES (BRACHIOPODA) AND THE ORIGIN OF THE SPIRIFERIDES, Palaeontology, 39, 1996, pp. 941-977
The brachidium is revealed for the first time in the Late Ordovician E
ospirifer praecursor, the earliest known eospiriferine and probably th
e ancestor of the entire Spirifer group. The adult stages of the speci
es possess a spiralium directed ventro-laterally with a pair of small
jugal processes without a jugum. The brachidium of the other five spec
ies of Eospirifer (including E. radiatus (Sowerby), the type species)
and three of Striispirifer (including S. plicatellus (Linnaeus)) from
the LIandovery, Wenlock or Ludlow in South China, Kazakhstan, England,
Sweden and Canada are also revealed and reconstructed, demonstrating
the same type of brachidium as in E. praecursor. The structure of the
early brachidial growth stage of E. praecursor is similar to that of t
he adult stages of the early atrypoid Cyclospira bisulcata (Emmons). T
his, coupled with the evidence of cardinalia, is of significance in th
e evaluation of eospiriferine origins. A shallow-water environment is
proposed for the origination of the Spiriferida. Eospirifer, a progeni
tor and Lazarus genus, probably originated in East and Central Asia in
the mid Ashgill; it disappeared in the late Ashgill, but survived the
latest Ordovician mass extinction, recovered in Asia and Australia in
the Early-Mid Llandovery, and did not spread to Europe and America un
til the later Llandovery (about the sedgwickii Biozone). A striated ca
rdinal process is also seen for the first time in the topotype of E. r
adiatus, indicating that its presence may not be of fundamental signif
icance in the generic classification of the eospiriferine group.