This species was discovered in the mudstone rocks from
New York State, from a rock layer called the Lorraine Group. The discovery was said to be the earliest evidence for parental care in the fossils of ostracod. Although some reported this discovery as "oldest parenting of fossil record", however some
Cambrian fossil records with brood care, like
Waptia are known. “The mother kept the eggs and the hatchlings in brooding pouches within her body until the young ones were big enough to go out on their own,” David Siveter, professor of geology at the University of Leicester in the UK who led the study, told
The Telegraph India. A research paper by Siveter and his colleagues describing the ostracod fossils was published in the journal
Current Biology. == References ==