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Encyclopedia > Yohoia

Yohoia is a tiny, extinct animal from the Cambrian period that has been found as fossils in the Burgess Shale formation of British Columbia, Canada. It has been placed among the arachnomorphs, a group of arthropods that includes the chelicerates and trilobites. Their sizes range from 7 to 23 mm.


Specimens of Yohoia have a head shield which is followed by 13 trunk tergites, or plates. On both sides, the bottom side of the first 10 of these ended in backward-pointing, triangular points or projections. The last three plates were complete tubes, circling the entire trunk. At the end of the trunk was a paddle-like tail. There were also a pair of large extensions at the front of the head shield. They had a pronounced "elbow" and ended in four long spines, looking rather like fingers. There were three appendages on the bottom of the head shield on each side, and these are assumed to have supported the creature on the sandy or silty sea bottom. There were also single appendages hanging down under the body plates which were flap-like and fringed with setae, probably used for swimming and respiration. Specimens also show some bulbous formations at the front of the head shield that may have served as eyes.


Yohois is assumed to been a mainly benthic (bottom-dwelling) creature that swam just above the muddy ocean floor and using its appendages to scavenge or capture prey.


References

Briggs, Derek; Erwin, Douglas; Collier, Frederick. The Fossils of the Burgess Shale. Smithsonian Books 1994


  Results from FactBites:
 
Arthropoda (4878 words)
Discussion: Chelicerata possess chelicerae, though when considering fossils these are often not preserved and accessory characteristics, median eyes and some degree of post-abdominal differentiation, may be more useful diagnostics.
It is within an extended "Chelicerate-Allided Clade" that a recent study (Cotton and Braddy 2000) has placed some of the more famous Burgess Shale-type problematica, including Leancoila, Yohoia, Fortiforceps, Sidneyia, and Emeraldella.
However, this conclusion is predicated, in part, on the the classical view that chelicerates "have lost the antennae, and the chelicerae are homologous to the second cephalic appendages of antennate arthropods."
  More results at FactBites »


 

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