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1 January 2010 Phylogenetic and Biogeographic Analysis of Deiphonine Trilobites
Curtis R. Congreve, Bruce S. Lieberman
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Abstract

Cladistic parsimony analysis of the subfamily Deiphoninae Raymond, 1913 was conducted to produce a hypothesis of relationship for the group. The genera Deiphon Barrande, 1850 and Onycopyge Woodward, 1880 are found to be monophyletic, while the genus Sphaerocoryphe Angelin, 1854, as it was previously defined, is paraphyletic. A modified Brooks Parsimony Analysis using the phylogenetic hypothesis reveals patterns of biogeography, in particular, vicariance and geodispersal, during the Ordovician-Silurian. The analysis yields three major conclusions about deiphonine biogeography: Eastern Laurentia and Baltica were close enough during the late Ordovician to exchange taxa via sea level rise and fall; chance dispersal occurred between Northwestern Laurentia and Australia; and deiphonine trilobites likely originated in Baltica or Eastern Laurentia.

Curtis R. Congreve and Bruce S. Lieberman "Phylogenetic and Biogeographic Analysis of Deiphonine Trilobites," Journal of Paleontology 84(1), 128-136, (1 January 2010). https://doi.org/10.1666/09-026.1
Accepted: 1 August 2009; Published: 1 January 2010
KEYWORDS
biogeography
Cheiruridae
Cladistic
Deiphoninae
trilobite
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