†?Huangshandongia yichangensis Shicheng and Zhilin, 1990
†?Liantuoia inflata Shicheng and Zhilin, 1990
Hurdia is an extinctgenus of hurdiidradiodont that lived 505 million years ago during the Cambrian Period. Fossils have been found in North America, China and the Czech Republic.
Description
Hurdia was one of the largest organisms in the Cambrian oceans, H. victoria reached between 18.3–30.5 cm (7.2–12.0 in) in length, while H. triangulata reached up to just 8.1 cm (3.2 in) long.[1] Its head bore a pair of frontal appendages. These frontal appendages had 9 or more rarely 10 or 11 segments/podomeres, which were approximately rectangular and decreased in size towards the end of the appendage. The upper surface of the appendage was convexly curved. Podomeres 2 to 6 bore long downward pointing spines (ventral spines) with forward-curving tips. These ventral spines themselves bore up to 9 equally spaced forward-facing spines dubbed auxiliary spines, with podomeres 7 and 8 bearing shorter, smooth forward curving spines. The frontal appenages were used to bring food to its ring-shaped mouth (oral cone), in which four large plates are present, with inner rows of spines inside the main cone.[2] Like other hurdiids, Hurdia bore a large frontal carapace protruding from its head composed of three sclerites: a central component known as the H-element and two lateral components known as P-elements. Originally, it is estimated that body flaps ran along the sides of the organisms, from which large gills were suspended.[3] However, anatomy of Aegirocassis clarified that Hurdia had both ventral and dorsal flaps, and gills were on trunk segments.[4]
Movement range of the frontal appendage
Interpretations of placements (A based on articulated specimens, B based on speculation from Cambroraster) of the frontal appendages and mouthparts of Hurdia
Morphology of the oral cone
Size comparison of the two species
Hurdia frontal appendage
Ecology
Hurdia is either suggested to have used its frontal appendages to sift small prey from sediment, or to have used them as a trap to capture larger benthic (seafloor dwelling) prey.[5]
Distribution
Hurdia had cosmopolitan distribution; two described species has been recovered from the Burgess Shale in British Columbia, Canada. In addition, H. victoria is also known from the Spence Shale in Utah, USA.[6] Unnamed species are known from Qingjiang biota in Hubei, China, Pioche Shale in Nevada, USA, and Wheeler Shale in Utah, USA.[6][7]Huangshandongia yichangensis and Liantuoia inflata from the Shuijingtuo Formation in Hubei, China, and Proboscicaris hospes from the Jince Formation of the Czech Republic (which is identified as Hurdia hospes in some papers[8]), and unnamed fossil from OrdovicianFezouata Formation could represent species of Hurdia as well.[3][2]
Taxonomic history
Hurdia was named in 1912 by Charles Walcott, with two species, the type species H. victoria and a referred species, H. triangulata.[9] The genus name refers to Mount Hurd.[9] It is possible that Walcott had described a specimen the year prior as Amiella, but the specimen is too fragmentary to identify with certainty, so Amiella is a nomen dubium.[10] Walcott's original specimens consisted only of H-elements of the frontal carapace, which he interpreted as being the carapace of an unidentified type of crustacean. P-elements of the carapace were described as a separate genus, Proboscicaris, in 1962.
In 1996, then-curator of the Royal Ontario MuseumDesmond H. Collins erected the taxon Radiodonta to encompass Anomalocaris and its close relatives, and included both Hurdia and Proboscicaris in the group.[11] He subsequently recognized that Proboscicaris and Hurdia were based on different parts of the same animal, and recognized that a specimen previously assigned to Peytoia was also a specimen of the species.[10] He presented his ideas in informal articles,[12][13] and it was not until 2009, after three years of painstaking research, that the complete organism was reconstructed.[3][14][15][16]
Sixty-nine specimens of Hurdia are known from the Greater Phyllopod bed, where they comprise 0.13% of the community.[17]
^ abWalcott, Charles D. (1912-03-13). "Middle Cambrian Branchiopoda, Malacostraca, Trilobita, and Merostomata". Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections. 57 (6).
^ abDaley, Allison C.; Budd, Graham E.; Caron, Jean-Bernard (2013). "Morphology and systematics of the anomalocaridid arthropod Hurdia from the Middle Cambrian of British Columbia and Utah". Journal of Systematic Palaeontology. 11 (7): 743–787. doi:10.1080/14772019.2012.732723. S2CID86465719.
^D. Collins, in North American Paleontological
Convention, Chicago, Abstracts with Programs, S. Lidgard,
P. R. Crane, Eds. (The Paleontological Society, Special Publication 6, Chicago, IL, 1992), p. 66,
11.
^D. Collins (1999). "Dinocarids: the first monster predators on earth". Rotunda. Vol. 32. Royal Ontario Museum. p. 25.