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Xyloiuloidea

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Subphylum
  
Myriapoda

Superorder
  
Juliformia

Rank
  
Superfamily

Phylum
  
Arthropoda

Class
  
Diplopoda

Order
  
incertae sedis

Xyloiuloidea

Similar
  
Zosterogrammidae, Archipolypoda, Eoarthropleura, Arthropleuridea, Siphonocryptida

Xyloiuloidea is an extinct superfamily of millipedes known from the Lower Devonian through the Upper Pennsylvanian of Europe and North America.

Contents

Description

Xyloiuloids are more or less cylindrical, with sternites, pleurites, and tergites of each body segment fused into a complete ring. Adults possess 40 to 50 body rings. The legs are no longer than half the height of the body. The body surface is marked by small parallel grooves (striations), which vary in surface coverage between xyloiuloid families.

Taxonomy

Xyloiuloidea comprises four families:

  • †Gaspestriidae
  • †Nyraniidae
  • †Plagiascetidae
  • †Xyloiulidae
  • The taxonomic history of Xyloiuloidea begins with Orator F. Cook designating the family Xyloiulidae in 1895. In 1969, Richard L. Hoffman established the families Nyraniidae and Plagiascetidae, and placed all three extinct families in the extant (still-living) order Spirobolida, as suborder "Xyloiulidea". In 2006, two new species were described and placed in the new family Gaspestriidae, and group was reassigned as a superfamily of uncertain status (incertae sedis) within the juliform millipedes, a group that includes the cylindrical, fused-bodied orders Spirobolida, Spirostreptida, and Julida.

    References

    Xyloiuloidea Wikipedia


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