Camenellan

Camenellan
Temporal range:
Reconstruction and life restoration of the camenellan Wufengella
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Order: Tommotiida
Informal group: Camenellans
Genera
  • Camenella Missarzhevsky in Rozanov & Missarzhevsky, 1966
  • Dailyatia Bischoff, 1976
  • Kelanella Missarzhevsky in Rozanov & Missarzhevsky, 1966; = Bengtsonia, Tesella, Sonella
  • Kennardia Laurie, 1986
  • Lapworthella
  • Shetlandia Wrona, 2004
  • Wufengella Guo et al. 2022

The camenellans, consisting of the genera Camenalla, Dailyatia, Kennardia, Kelanella, Wufengella and Lapworthella, are a (probably monophyletic) group of Tommotiid invertebrates from the Cambrian period, reconstructed as sister to all others (plus brachiopods and phoronids). They are primarily known from isolated sclerites, but are believed to have a scleritomous, Halkieria-like construction. This was confirmed by the discovery of Wufengella, known from articulated remains, which showed camenellans to be mobile, worm-like animals.

Dailyatia and Camenella have distinct dorsal (symmetrical) and lateral (asymmetric) sclerite morphologies. The same has been asserted for Lapworthella even though that has not always been the common perception.

It has been argued that Camenella, Kelanella and Lapworthella, assuming a slug-like anatomy, had an anterior 'head valve' followed by pairs of asymmetric valves running in pairs along their dorsal surface.

The 'head valve' in Lapworthella - that is the bilaterally symmetric Morph A valve - is thought to have fused from two ontogenetically separate sclerites. Dailyatia has a similar double-mounded structure at the tip of its A type sclerites.

Growth rings in all are marked out by prominent external ridges.