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Chimerarachne

Description

Chimerarachne is a genus of extinct arachnids containing a single species Chimerarachne yingi. Fossils of Chimerarachne were discovered in Burmese amber from Myanmar which dates to the mid-Cretaceous, about 100 million years ago. Its classification is disputed, either belonging to Uraraneida a group otherwise known from the Devonian to Permian, or a separate clade closer to spiders. Since the earliest spider fossils are from the Carboniferous, either answer results in an at least a 170 myr ghost lineage with no fossil record, making it a Lazarus taxon. The size of the animal is quite small, being only 2.5 mm in body length, with the tail being about 3mm in length. These fossils resemble spiders in having two of their key defining features: spinnerets for spinning silk, and a modified male organ on the pedipalp for transferring sperm. At the same time they retain a whip-like tail, rather like that of a whip scorpion and uraraneids. Chimerarachne is not ancestral to spiders, being much younger than the oldest spiders which are known from the Carboniferous, but it appears to be a late survivor of an extinct group which was probably very close to the origins of spiders. It suggests that there used to be spider-like animals with tails which lived alongside true spiders for at least 200 million years.


Source Data
SourceIDLink
Global Biodiversity Information Facility ID (GBIF)9374145https://www.gbif.org/species/9374145
PaleoBioDB ID (PBDB)367635https://paleobiodb.org/classic/checkTaxonInfo?taxon_no=367635
Rankgenus
Taxonomy (GBIF)Life : Animalia : Arthropoda : Arachnida : Chimerarachne
Taxonomy (PBDB)Life : Animalia : Arthropoda : Arachnida : Araneida : Chimerarachnidae : Chimerarachne
Taxonomic Status (GBIF)accepted
Classification
(PBDB,GBIF)
RankNameAuthor
-Eukaryota
-OpisthokontaCavalier-Smith 1987
kingdomAnimalia
-Bilateria
-EubilateriaAx 1987
-ProtostomiaGrobben 1908
-Ecdysozoa
-Panarthropoda
phylumArthropodaLatreille 1829
subphylumChelicerataHeymons 1901
-EuchelicerataWeygoldt and Paulus 1979
-ProsomapodaLamsdell 2013
classXiphosura
orderXiphosuridaLatreille 1802
-PlanatergaLamsdell 2013
-DekatriataLamsdell 2013
-SclerophorataKamenz et al. 2011
classArachnidaLamarck 1801
-PantetrapulmonataShultz 2007
subclassTetrapulmonataSchultz 1990
-SerikodiastidaGarwood and Dunlop 2014
orderAraneidaClerck 1757
suborderChimerarachnidaWunderlich 2018
familyChimerarachnidaeWunderlich 2019
genusChimerarachneWang et al. 2018
Scientific NameChimerarachne Wang et al., 2018
Opinions (PBDB)
NameRankOpinionEvidenceAuthor
Chimerarachnegenusbelongs to Pantetrapulmonatastated with evidenceWang et al., 2018
Chimerarachnegenusbelongs to Uraraneidastated with evidenceHuang et al., 2018
Chimerarachnegenusbelongs to Chimerarachnidaestated with evidenceWunderlich, 2019
Status (PBDB)extinct
Taxon Size (PBDB)2
First Recorded Appearance99.6 - 93.5 Ma
Late/Upper Cretaceous
Last Recorded Appearance99.6 - 93.5 Ma
Late/Upper Cretaceous
Environmentterrestrial (based on Arachnida)
Motilityactively mobile (based on Arachnida)
Visionlimited (based on Xiphosurida)
Dietcarnivore (based on Xiphosura)
Taphonomychitin (based on Arachnida)
Primary Reference (PBDB)B. Wang, J. A. Dunlop, and P. A. Selden, R. J. Garwood, W. A. Shear, P. Müller, X. J. Lei. 2018. Cretaceous arachnid Chimerarachne yingi gen. et sp. nov. illuminates spider origins. Nature Ecology & Evolution 2(4):614-622
Wikipediahttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chimerarachne

Fossil Distribution

Subtaxa

NameStatusCommon Name(s)Fossil OccurrencesOldestYoungest
Chimerarachne yingi
species
accepted (GBIF)
listed (PBDB)
199.6 Ma
Late/Upper Cretaceous
99.6 Ma
Late/Upper Cretaceous

Synonymy List

YearName and Author
2018Chimerarachne Huang et al. p. 623
2018Chimerarachne Wang et al. p. 614
2019Chimerarachne Wunderlich p. 6

References

Wang B., Dunlop J. A., et al (2018) Cretaceous arachnid Chimerarachne yingi gen. et sp. nov. illuminates spider origins, Nature Ecology & Evolution 2 4, 614-622
Huang D. Y., Hormiga G., et al (2018) Origin of spiders and their spinning organs illuminated by mid-Cretaceous amber fossils, Nature Ecology & Evolution 2 4, 623-627
Wunderlich J. (2019) What is a spider?, Beiträge zur Araneologie 12, 1-32
Data courtesy of: PBDB: The Paleobiology Database, Creative Commons CC-BY licenced. , GBIF: the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, various licences, iDigBio, various licences, and EOL: The Encyclopedia of Life (Open Data Public Domain). Because fossils are made of minerals too!
 
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