Triops cancriformis | |
---|---|
Triops cancriformis Nauplien | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Branchiopoda |
Order: | Notostraca |
Family: | Triopsidae |
Genus: | Triops |
Species: | T. cancriformis
|
Binomial name | |
Triops cancriformis | |
The rough range of Triops cancriformis |
Triops cancriformis, European tadpole shrimp or tadpole shrimp is a species of tadpole shrimp found in Europe to the Middle East and India.[2]
Due to habitat destruction, many populations have recently been lost across its European range, so, the species is considered endangered in the United Kingdom and in several European countries.[2] In captivity they commonly grow up to 6 centimetres (2.4 in); in the wild they can achieve sizes of 11 cm (4.3 in).[2]
In the UK, there are just two known populations: in a pool and adjacent area in the Caerlaverock Wetlands in Scotland, and a temporary pond in the New Forest.[3] The species is legally protected under Schedule 5 of the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 (as amended).[4]
In the past, fossils from the Lower Triassic of France and Upper Triassic of Germany have been attributed to this species, with some even described as specimens of the subspecies T. c. minor, but later research reassigned all of these Triassic specimens to different extinct taxa of uncertain taxonomic family: the notostracan Apudites antiquus and the diplostracans Olesenocaris galli and Grauvogelocaris alsatica.[5] The putative Lower Permian subspecies from France has also been redescribed as a separate notostracan taxon, Heidiops permiensis.[6] Genetic evidence indicates that T. cancriformis only diverged from other Triops species around 23.7–49.6 million years ago.[7]