Ctenocystoidea
Ctenocystoidea is an extinct clade of echinoderms, which lived during the Cambrian and Ordovician periods. Unlike other echinoderms, ctenocystoids had bilateral symmetry, or were only very slightly asymmetrical. They are believed to be one of the earliest-diverging branches of echinoderms, with their bilateral symmetry a trait shared with other deuterostomes. Ctenocystoids were once classified in the taxon Homalozoa, also known as Carpoidea, alongside cinctans, solutes, and stylophorans. Homalozoa is now recognized as a polyphyletic group of echinoderms without radial symmetry. Ctenocystoids were geographically widespread during the Middle Cambrian, with one species surviving into the Late Ordovician.
Description
Like other echinoderms, ctenocystoids had a skeleton made of stereom plates. Ctenocystoids had near bilateral symmetry, with some species exhibiting slightly asymmetric plate shapes. Like cinctans and Ctenoimbricata, most ctenocystoids had large marginal plates surrounding the sides of their body, but unlike cinctans and Ctenoimbricata, which had only one row of marginal plates, most ctenocystoids had two rows of marginal plates. Courtessolea had only one row of marginal plates, like cinctans and Ctenoimbricata, whereas Conollia lost the marginal plates entirely. The anus of ctenocystoids was surrounded by a pyramidal periproct as in other echinoderms. It was located at the posterior end, defining a clear anterior-posterior body axis unlike other echinoderms.All ctenocystoids had a ctenoid apparatus, a comb-like arrangement of movable plates at the anterior end of the animal. Beneath the ctenoid apparatus was a mouth, bordered on each side by a food groove.
Classification
Relationships
Ctenocystoids are likely among the most basal stem-group echinoderms. They have also been interpreted as aberrant blastozoans and as stem-group hemichordates. The presence of stereom plates indicates that they most likely belong to the echinoderm total group, rendering a hemichordate affinity unlikely.Courtessolea was probably the most basal ctenocystoid, given its anatomical similarities to Ctenoimbricata and cinctans. Conollia and Jugoszovia may be closely related to each other, as both have a reduced marginal frame compared to other ctenocystoids.
Genera
The following genera of ctenocystoids have been named:Genus | Discoverers | Named | Age | Location | Notes |
Conollia | Domínguez Alonso | 1999 | Sandbian | The geologically youngest genus | |
Courtessolea | Domínguez Alonso | 1999 | Wuliuan | The most basal genus | |
Ctenocystis | Robison & Sprinkle | 1969 | Middle Cambrian | The first genus discovered | |
Etoctenocystis | Fatka & Kordule | 1985 | Middle Cambrian | ||
Gilcidia | Domínguez Alonso | 1999 | Middle Cambrian | ||
Jugoszovia | Džik & Orłowski | 1995 | Middle Cambrian | ||
Pembrocystis | Domínguez Alonso | 1999 | Middle Cambrian |