Cyclopygids have particularly large eyes with a wide angle view, also vertically, that occupy most of the free cheeks, and the fixed cheeks absent or reduced to a very narrow strip at the sides of the glabella, and a zone between the both eyes. In the earliest cyclopygids (
Prospectatrix) the eyes are less enlarged, but in some later
taxa, eyes are so big they have even fused. The most backward lobe of the glabella (the occipital ring) cannot be identified, except in the Ellipsotaphrinae subfamily. Further furrows crossing the glabella may be absent or are reduced to pairs of slight depressions. Genal spines are lacking. Cyclopygids have between 5 and 7 thorax segments. The pleurae become successively wider further back, making the thorax widest across the last segment. In a few species of the genera
Cyclopyge,
Microparia,
Ellipsotaphrus,
Pricyclopyge and in
Symphysops the eyes are merged in front of the head creating a
visor. This development improves the sensitivity of the eye for objects that move relative to the eye, which might have been particularly useful under low-light conditions and when rapidly moving. The extant
hyperiid amphipod Cystisoma also has such fused eyes. Monocular trilobites are always younger than closely related species with normal paired eyes, and is an example of a trend
that occurred several times in parallel. Only in
Pricyclopyge binodosa several stages in this development can be seen as a consecutive series of subspecies collected from successive zones in the late
Arenig to the
Llanvirn. Although the distance between the eyes varies within any one population of the earlier subspecies, the eyes only touch and merge in
P. binodosa synophthalma. == Ecology ==