Ancalagon minor Temporal range:
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Reconstruction of Ancalagon minor | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Stem group: | Priapulida (?) |
Class: | †Archaeopriapulida |
Family: | †Ancalagonidae Conway Morris, 1977[1] |
Genus: | †Ancalagon Conway Morris, 1977[1] |
Species | |
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Synonyms | |
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Ancalagon minor is an extinct priapulid worm known from the Cambrian Burgess Shale.[3]
Because it superficially resembles the modern-day internal parasites known as the acanthocephalids or "spiny-headed worms," A. minor was once thought to be, or once thought to resemble the hypothetical free-living ancestor of acanthocephalids.[3][4] Two specimens of Ancalagon are known from the Greater Phyllopod bed, where they comprise < 0.01% of the community.[5]
Along with the other Cambrian worms such as Ottoia, Selkirkia, Louisella, Fieldia, Scolecofurca, and Lecythioscopa, the organism may fall into a clade termed "Archaeopriapulida," a stem group to the Priapulids proper.[6] However, the morphological similarity of these organisms to their modern cousins is remarkable, especially for the Burgess Shale.[7] A phylogenetic analysis does not provide a great deal of resolution to the relationships between these basal worms.[8]