of
Aspidella,
Wigwamiella enigmatica Aspidella is derived from the
Latin diminutive of
Ancient Greek aspis (Ασπις, a round shield), and
terranovica is Latin for "from the new land" (i.e.
Newfoundland). Different
morphological forms have been called
Ediacaria or
Spriggia. However, the differences between the small elliptical "typical"
Aspidella, the flat, ringed
Spriggia wadea and the large, pimpled, and rayed
Ediacaria seem to be due to different
taphonomic conditions. For example,
Spriggia and
Ediacaria appear to be remains of the same animals, only that the former was fossilized in more compact, fine-grained
clay, whereas the latter is known from rocks that originally were predominantly
sandy sediment. Numerous other
taxa may also be junior
synonyms of
Aspidella: Due to its nondescript nature,
Aspidella might be considered a
form taxon, an artificial assemblage of similar-looking and similar-living organisms without a
phylogenetic relationship. In this case, some presumed synonyms (such as
Ediacaria or
Cyclomedusa) would remain valid. The
type specimens were of the ellipsoid type (they are lost, but a cast remains). Thus, if
Aspidella in the loose sense turns out to be an assemblage of more or less related taxa, the genus name would apply only to the smallish ellipsoid specimens. Regardless of its ultimate classification, because it has been classified as either an animal, or a plant (alga), or a fungus (lichen), the name
Aspidella is covered by both Codes of Nomenclature, and this prevents adoption of a later homonym "
Aspidella" (Gilbert 1940) for a group of extant mushrooms, now renamed
Saproamanita. == Occurrence ==