A new Triassic austrolimulid from Poland presents insight into xiphosurid evolution and palaeobiogeography at the dawn of the Mesozoic
Jonatan Audycki, Russell D.C. Bicknell, Grzegorz Niedźwiedzki, Kenneth De Baets

TL;DR
A newly discovered Early Triassic xiphosurid from Poland reveals new insights into their evolution and distribution during the Mesozoic era.
Contribution
The discovery of Polonolimulus zaleziankensis expands the geographic and morphological range of austrolimulids in the Early Triassic.
Findings
Polonolimulus zaleziankensis is a new austrolimulid genus from the Holy Cross Mountains in Poland.
The new find shows that austrolimulids had a wide distribution in the Early Triassic, challenging previous assumptions.
The study questions the hypothesis that austrolimulids inhabited fully freshwater environments.
Abstract
Xiphosurids are aquatic chelicerates widely viewed as examples of so-called ‘living fossils’ due to their apparent morphological conservatism and limited diversity since at least the Jurassic. However, earlier representatives were much more diverse and morphologically disparate. Particularly striking are hypertrophied genal spines and reduced thoracetrons of the Triassic austrolimulids, possibly related to their colonization of brackish or freshwater habitats. Here we describe Polonolimulus zaleziankensis gen. et sp. nov., a new austrolimulid genus from the Early Triassic of Holy Cross Mountains, Poland. Geometric morphometric analysis positions the new find among the morphologically most ‘extreme’ austrolimulids, extending the geographic range of those forms to Central Europe. A palaeobiogeographic reconstruction of Triassic xiphosurids reveals their surprisingly wide distribution…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPaleontology and Stratigraphy of Fossils · Paleontology and Evolutionary Biology · Plant Diversity and Evolution
