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The heyday of the trilobites was during the Cambrian (570 to 505mya). Due to increased competition for food resources (for example, graptolites and brachiopods), they were subject to a successive displacement from their original habitats. This process was also accelerated by the appearance of predators, such as large cephalopods, eurypterids (which looked like gigantic crayfishes) and fishes. The evolution of better predators and competition for food finally resulted in the extinction of the trilobites during the Permian (220mya) and evolutionary innovations, such as the ability to roll up and the development of masticatory organs and long spines (see below), could only slow their decline.
From a systematic point of view, trilobites belong to the class of the †Trilobita, which belong to the subphylum of the †Trilobitomorpha. This subphylum is assigned to the Arthropoda phylum and the class of the Eutrilobita can then be subdivided into ten orders (Figs. 1, 3 and 4)
Trilobites, whose name is based on the fact that their body plan crudely consists of three parts consisting of a long central axial lobe, flanked on each side by right and left pleural lobes (and not the head, body and tail as is commonly assumed). Among the 1,300 genera described in the literature, many were characterised by a worldwide distribution and have therefore gained a special significance as index fossils. They were present from the lowest Cambrian (570mya) to the uppermost Permian (220mya), which provided ample time for evolution to create a diverse range of morphologies.
On their dorsal (top) side, these animals were protected by a dorsal shield, which overlapped a little bit with the ventral (under)side at the lateral margins of the animal. However, the main part of the ventral region was not protected by any chitinous armour. As well as the three lobed division mentioned above, the dorsal shield of the trilobites is subdivided into three main parts, namely the cephalon (head), the thorax (abdomen) and the pygidium (tail). The thorax and pygidium consist of the lateral pleura, represented by long, arrow-like shield segments and the central rhachis, which shows a slight similarity to the spinal column of vertebrates (Fig. 2). From a biochemical point of view, the dorsal shield is composed of a two-layer cuticula, with a thin, outer layer consisting of prisms and a thick, inner layer including several strata. The armour is moulted periodically (which is referred to as ecdysis), to allow for continued growth by the animal. (A similar phenomenon can be observed in arthropods, such as crayfishes and insects, today.) While the separate segments of the cephalon and pygidium are completely fused, the respective units of the thorax are usually connected by joints, which enabled the animals to partially enrol.
The cephalon includes a central bulge (glabella), which is subdivided by several furrows. Facial sutures separate the different parts of the cephalon (which are not moulted during ecdysis) from those that are moulted, which allows for the growth in size of the head segment to support the growth of the head segment. In most cases, those parts of the cephalon that are moulted also include the compound eyes, which consist of a variable number of CaCO3-lenses (up to a maximum of 15,000 in some species), with a crystal cone below each lens. The ventral side of the cephalon comprises the rostral plate, the taxonomically important hypostome, as well as the small metastom, which is only known in a very small number of species. The thorax is characterised by a large number of segments, which could move and, therefore, increased the flexibility of the animals.
The pygidium commonly includes a variable number of non-flexible segments. Similar to the cephalon, its connection with the thorax is by means of a joint. It can be either very small or significantly larger than the cephalon, depending on the species.
Due to the extraordinary fossilisation of some trilobites, it has become apparent that these animals developed one pair of pre-oral antennae, as well as a variable number of biramous limbs. The extremities themselves consisted of a so-called telopodite, which was responsible for locomotion and the so-called pre-epipodite, which most probably supported the gills. Some trilobites were marked by sexual dimorphism (that is, males and females with different body size), while others had the ability to roll themselves up. Like other arthropods, trilobites went through a significant number of moults (up to 30) during their lifetime. Therefore, most fossil finds of these animals are the moulted ‘exuvias’, rather than whole organisms.
According to modern palaeontological research, the ontogenetic development of trilobites can be subdivided into three main stages:
Further moults after the holaspid stage enabled trilobites to achieve a remarkable increase in size. Most adult trilobites reached a length between 3cm and 8cm. The smallest species measured about 0.5cm in length, whereas the largest known specimen had a body length of 75cm.
As we know from a huge number of palaeontological investigations, trilobites were mainly epibenthic residents of shallow marine regions situated near the coast. Species without compound eyes probably burrowed into the mud and therefore adopted an endobenthic life. Due to the absence of differentiating oral extremities (like mouths), trilobites mainly fed on microorganisms, such as protozoa or algae. In some cases, they were simple mud feeders, with the ability to filter nutrients. For some phacopids, masticatory organs have been reported, which may imply a predatory lifestyle.
It is commonly suggested that trilobites produced specific resting, walking, feeding and funeral traces that are known among experts as rusophycus and cruziana and bilobites. In general, the animals were mediocre swimmers and, due to the absence of claws or other defensive mechanisms, they were rather defenceless against all kinds of predators. Therefore, they must have had to hide in rock fissures or in the mud of the sea floor to avoid being eaten. On the one hand, reduced mobility, and on the other, dependence on specific biotopes, resulted in the development of endemism (an endemic species is characterised by a geographically limited occurrence) and specific trilobite provinces. Such provinces are especially recognisable in the Lower and Middle Cambrian (570 to 550mya).
Further reading
Chatterton, B. D. E. And Speyer, S. E. (1989). Larval ecology, life history strategies, and patterns of extinction and survivorship among Ordovician trilobites. Palaeobiology 15: 118-132.
Fortey, R. A. (2000). Trilobite: Eyewitness to Evolution. New York: Vintage Books.
Fortey, R. A. (2004). The Lifestyles of the Trilobites. American Scientist 92: 446-453.
Fortey, R. A. (2001). Trilobite systematics: The last 75 years. Journal of Palaeontology 75: 1141-1151.
Lehmann, U and Hillmer, G. (1988). Wirbellose Tiere der Vorzeit. Leitfaden der systematischen Paläontologie der Invertebraten. Stuttgart: Enke.
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Filed under: fossils Tagged: agnostida, corynexochida, fossil trilobite, fossil trilobites, lichida, nectaspida, Palaeozoic, phacopida, redlichiida, trilobite, Trilobites
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