Palaeos: Palaeos Rhynchonelliformea
Brachiopoda Orthida


Order Orthida

(Cambrian-Permian)

Schizophoria

The orthid brachiopods were the first important articulate group to diversify, and appeared during the Early Cambrian period, and became very diverse during the Ordovician.   They are typically strophic (having a straight hinge line), and well developed interareas. Radiating ribs are also common in this group, as are sulcus and fold structures.  Usually one valve (usually the brachial valve) is flatter than the other.  The cardinalia (structures in the interior of the brachial valve) of orthids are usually simple. The shape is sub-circular to elliptical with the valves generally biconvex.



Evolutionary History

The orthids began with small subquadrate forms during the early and middle Cambrian.  There is some controversy now over whether many of these early types really were Orthids at all, or should be separated into a distinct Order, or even, in recent classification systems, a different class. I have followed the classification scheme in use by external link EuroBrachNet and the revised Treatise of Invertebrate Paleontology, and transferred the better known of these early primitive forms to different orders and classes. Whether this arrangement will still be in use in future years and decades, or a totally different view of early brachiopod phylogeny will be adopted, remains to be seen.

An apparently early modification in the late Early Cambrian gave rise to the more characteristic orthaceans in which the delthyrium and notothyrium are open. This implies that a pedicle rudiment was developed as a primary segment of the larva as in modern articulates.  The orthaceans again have a fibrous secondary shell and are presumed to have arisen from some nisuisid stock, possibly by paedomorphic changes affecting pedicle development in particular.


By the Furongian Epoch orthids and orthid-like brachiopods achieved considerable variety and widths of 2 to 5 cm.  Furongian and earliest Ordovician genera included shells with rounded to high, pointed pedicle valves, sharp to obtuse extremities, and fine to coarse ridges (called costae).
Hesperorthis
Hesperorthis
Middle Ordovician to Middle Silurian
length about 2 cm
illustration from Fenton & Fenton, The Fossil Book, 1958, Doubleday & co., p.120

During the mid-Ordovician, punctate shells appeared, establishing the suborder Dalmanellidina (the superfamily Enteletacea of the Treatise of Invertebrate Paleontology).  Both the Orthodina and Dalmanellidinar suborders then gave rise to a great variety of genera and species, some of which resembled members of the other suborder and even of different orders.  One Ordovician orthid looked like a strophomenid, and Productorthis developed both shape and ornamentation which were paralleled during the later Paleozoic by the spiny productids. Platystrophia anticipated the spirifers in both shape and habit and even went through similar changes in the evolution of its species.

Platystrophia
Platystrophia
Late Ordovician- period
illustration from Fenton & Fenton, The Fossil Book, 1958, Doubleday & co., p.120

The Orthids were greatly reduced by the end Ordovician extinction event, although both impuncate and puncate Orthids continued through to the early Devonian.  At that time the impunctate types died out, but the punctate Dalmanellidina continued on.  These sometimes resembled morphotypes of earlier Orthodina.  Schizophoria, of Devonian age, resembles the mid-Ordovician Hebertella.   The punctate Orthids continued as a minor element of the benthic fauna until the end of the Permian.

Schizophoria
Schizophora
Middle Silurian to Permian
length 3 cm, width 4.5 cm
illustration from Fenton & Fenton, The Fossil Book, 1958, Doubleday & co., p.120

Systematics

On the left is the classification according to the external link Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology.  On the right is the newer classification by external linkEuroBrachNet, which divides the old category of Orthids into several distinct, even unrelated orders

external linkTreatise on Invertebrate Paleontology
external linkClassification des Brachiopoda
ORTHIDA
Orthidina
Billingsellacea (Middle Cambrian-Early Ordovician)
Orthacea (Middle Cambrian-Early Devonian)
Enteletacea (Middle Ordovician-Late Permian)

Clitambonitidina
Clitambonitacea (Ordovician)
Goniambonitacea (Ordovician)

Triplesiidina
Triplesiacea (Early Ordovician-Late Silurian)
Class Strophomenata
ORTHOTETIDA
Triplesiidina
Triplesioidea (Early Ordovician-Late Silurian)

BILLINGSELLIDA
Billingsellidina
Billingselloidea (Middle Cambrian-Early Ordovician)
Clitambonitidina
Clitambonitoidea (Ordovician)
Polytoechioidea (Ordovician)

not Orthids
Class Rhynchonellata
PROTORTHIDA
Protorthoidea (Early Cambrian-Late Devonian)
Skenidoidea (Lower Ordovician-Upper Devonian)
Orthid 
relatives
ORTHIDA
Orthodina
Orthoidea (Middle Cambrian-Early Devonian)
Plectorthoidea (Early Cambrian-Late Silurian)
Dalmanellidina
Dalmanelloidea (Early Ordovician-Late Devonian)
Enteletoidea (Middle Ordovician-Late Permian)
Orthids



Brachiopod main page
Brachiopoda main page



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page uploaded 7 June 2002
checked ATW030215
(originally uploaded on Kheper site uploaded 15 May 1999)
page by M. Alan Kazlev (Creative Commons Attribution license) 1999-2002
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