13 species of
Edestus have been named, but in a 2019
morphometric analysis only 4 were considered valid, which span a six million year interval in the Late Carboniferous (313-307 million years ago). Species of
Edestus are divided into two groups, those which have asymmetrical crowns that slant forwards, and those with symmetrical ones. The earliest known species are from the late
Bashkirian of the United Kingdom, with the first appearances in Russia and the United States during the
Moscovian, corresponding to a rise in sea level.
Asymmetric crowns •
E. triserratus Newton, 1904 (syn
Edestus minusculus Hay, 1909,
Edestodus kolomnensis (Lebedev, 2001)) Late Bashkirian to Moscovian, United States, United Kingdom and Russia distinguished by having obtuse triangular crowns that narrow to a "bullet shaped" apex, the
denticles are fine and the root is proportionally longer than
E. minor upper whorl has a massive straight base, while the lower whorl is slender and more tightly curved •
E. minor Newberry in Newberry and Worthen, 1866 (syn
E. mirus Hay, 1912
E. pringlei Watson, 1930) Late Bashkirian to Moscovian, United States and United Kingdom distinguished from other species by obtuse tapered crowns with fine denticles and a strongly curved lower whorl
Symmetric crowns •
E. heinrichi Newberry and Worthen, 1870 (syn
E. protopirata Trautschold, 1879,
Protopirata centrodon Trautschold, 1888,
E. karpinskyi Missuna, 1908,
E. crenulatus Hay, 1909,
E. serratus Hay, 1909) Moscovian of the United States and Russia, distinguished by having crowns with an acute triangular shape, with a slightly longer posterior than anterior edge, coarse denticles, and long and straight roots in the upper whorl, slightly curved in the lower whorl •
E. vorax Leidy, 1856 (syn
E. giganteus Newberry, 1889) Moscovian of the United States distinguished by crowns with acute triangular shape, a slightly longer posterior edge, very coarse denticles, stout roots that extend deep beneath the tooth crown, and intermediate apex angle
Edestus newtoni, described by
Arthur Smith Woodward in 1916 from the "
Millstone Grit" of Yorkshire, United Kingdom, has a much greater curvature of the whorl than other species of
Edestus, and has sometimes been placed in its own genus
Lestrodus. A placement in a separate genus is supported by its lack of a convex bulge opposite the tooth crowns, which is present on all other species of
Edestus. == Paleobiology ==