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Labechiida

Labechiida is an extinct order of stromatoporoid sponges. They lived from the Early Ordovician to the Late Devonian, though a few putative fossils have been reported from younger sediments. Labechiids were the first order of stromatoporoids to appear and were probably ancestral to all other orders in the main Paleozoic radiation. They were most diverse and abundant during the Middle-Late Ordovician and briefly again in the Famennian, when they were a major group of reef-building sponges. However, they were relatively uncommon through most of the Silurian and Devonian, in contrast to other stromatoporoids.

Description
Labechiids can be differentiated from other stromatoporoids by having an internal structure emphasizing cysts (pockets roofed by flat or convex cyst plates) and pillars (solid rods perpendicular to the surface).' The pillars may extend all the way to the surface and project out a short distance as small bumps known as papillae. Cyst plates may bear denticles (pointed thorns) or crenulations (pinched deflections) pointing upwards within the skeleton. Laminae (regular horizontal plates) are comparatively difficult to distinguish due to the more unorganized internal structure of labechiids compared to other stromatoporoids.' Mamelons are found in some species, while astrorhizae are indistinct or absent. Many labechiid fossils are poorly preserved, as their emphasis on cysts affords a lower skeletal density than other stromatoporoids. As a result, some traits used to distinguishing between taxa (such as pillar microstructure) may instead be taphonomic rather than biological in origin.'''' == Taxonomy ==
Taxonomy
From The Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology (Part E, Revised):'' • Sinodictyon Yabe & Sugiyama, 1930 [Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian)] • Thamnobeatricea Raymond, 1931 [Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian) – Upper Ordovician (Katian)] • Family Labechiidae Nicholson, 1879 • Labechia Edwards & Haime, 1851 [Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian) – Upper Devonian (Famennian), Viséan? – Upper Devonian] • Forolinia Nestor, 1964 [early Silurian] • Priscastroma Khromykh, 1999 [Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian)] • Pseudostylodictyon Ozaki, 1938 [Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian) – late Silurian] • Rosenella Nicholson, 1886 [Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian) – Upper Devonian (Famennian)] • Rosenellinella Yavorsky, 1967 [early – mid Silurian] • Family Stromatoceriidae Bogoyavlenskaya, 1969 • Cystistroma Etheridge, 1895 [Upper Ordovician (Sandbian – Katian)] • Radiostroma Webby, 1979 [Upper Ordovician (Katian)] • Stromatocerium Hall, 1847 [Upper Ordovician (Sandbian – Katian)] • Family Stylostromatidae Webby, 1993 • Eopennastroma Wang, 1978 [Upper Devonian (Famennian)] • Pachystylostroma Nestor, 1964 [Middle Ordovician (Darriwilian) – Upper Devonian] • Pennastroma Dong, 1964 [Upper Devonian (Famennian)] • Spinostroma Wang, 1978 [Upper Devonian (Famennian)] • Stylostroma Gorsky, 1938 [Upper Ordovician (Katian) – Upper Devonian] == Evolution ==
Evolution
Ordovician '', a large column-shaped aulaceratid from Late Ordovician Canada. The earliest reported labechiid species are from the Early Ordovician of South China: Lophiostroma leizunia (late Tremadocian) During the Darriwilian, 4 genera occur in the Chazy Group of eastern North America, 9 in the Machiakou Formation of North China, and several others are dispersed among Russia, Kazakhstan, Korea, and Malaysia. Most specialists agree that the ancestral labechiid was a member of the family Rosenellidae, but disagreement persists over which genus serves as the ancestral form. Studies focusing on North America and China generally consider the widespread Pseudostylodictyon Labechiids as a whole may be descended from non-stromatoporoid sponges in the order Pulchrilaminida. In the Sandbian stage of the Late Ordovician, labechiids spread to regions equivalent to Scotland and Australia, and some former Chinese endemics (such as the tree-shaped aulaceratids) populated Laurentia (North America) for the first time. In any case, Devonian labechiids never managed to repopulate southeast Laurussia (eastern North America) or high-latitude environments at any time during the period. Unlike other stromatoporoids, labechiids were not adversely affected by the Kellwasser event (Late Devonian mass extinction) at the end of the Frasnian (~372 Ma). Instead, they experienced a diversification in the Famennian stage, reacquiring a level of diversity and dominance in their niche not experienced since the Ordovician. Most new genera arose from the families Stylostromatidae and Platiferostromatidae, which helped to form dense reef habitats alongside the older relict forms. The labechiid resurgence was strongest in shallow water and the Eastern Hemisphere. Despite being reinvigorated after the Kellwasser event, labechiids and their reef ecosystems presumably did not survive the Hangenberg event (~359 Ma), a second mass extinction which marked the end of the Famennian stage and Devonian period. This extinction is generally considered absolute, but several possible exceptions have been reported to imply post-Devonian survival: Labechia carbonaria (from the Viséan stage of Carboniferous England) and Lophiostroma boletiformis (from Triassic rocks of the Pamir Mountains). These discontinuous reports pose the same set of questions applied to Early and Middle Devonian occurrences. Labechiid-like fossils are abundant in early Pennsylvanian (Bashkirian) reef deposits of the Akiyoshi Limestone Group in Japan, representing a Panthalassan seamount. == References ==
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