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A Curious Rusophycus (Arthropod Ichnofossil) Assemblage from the Upper Ordovician of Ontario, Canada

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The ichnogenus Rusophycus includes a wide range of short bilobate excavations generally attributed to variable feeding behaviors of arthropods, especially trilobites. An unusual Rusophycus assemblage from Upper Ordovician Georgian Bay Formation in Ontario departs radically from previously described examples and presents new challenges for understanding the behavior represented by these traces. This specimen is unique in the arrangement of multiple Rusophycus burrows in a circular, lens-shaped array (as opposed to a linear or random arrangement typical of other Rusophycus assemblages). The size and shape of the individual Rusophycus components are consistent with traces attributed to the coeval trilobite Flexicalymene. Multiple Rusophycus assemblages likely reflect aggregations of trilobites in response to a local concentration of food. The topology of this particular Rusophycus assemblage suggests that the trilobites opportunistically exploited a rich and narrowly restricted food source, perhaps the decaying remains of a buried organism.

Keywords: Arthropods; Behavior; Ordovician; Rusophycus; Trilobites

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: Department of Geological Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA 2: Department of Natural History (Paleontology), Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Publication date: 01 January 2011

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