File:20191003 Mollisonia plenovenatrix side.png|Reconstruction of
Mollisonia plenovenatrix in lateral wiew The genus is characterized by a capsule-like dorsal
exoskeleton (
tergites), which was divided into a
cephalon (head segment), 7
thoracic body segments, and a terminal
pygidium. Below the cephalon was a pair of huge
compound eyes, followed by three pairs of walking legs and three pairs of limbs with large
gnathobasic spines used to process food. As a Cambrian arthropod, the genus is significant by bearing several traits of now-surviving chelicerates, such as purportedly
pincer-like mouthparts (
chelicerae) and fused ring-like cephalic nerves (synganglion) within their head, as well as a series of multilayered
book gills underneath their trunk appendages.''
Mollisonia may have been a
benthic predator, using its anterior chelicerae and posterior gnathobasic limbs to devour prey items while using the 6 legs to walk around the sea floor. The gill-bearing trunk appendages may have been solely for breathing. This functional differentiation (head/prosomal appendages for feeding and walking, trunk/opisthosomal appendages for breathing) is closer to euchelicerates (crown-group chelicerates other than
sea spiders) than the basal chelicerate genera of
Habeliida (e.g.
Habelia,
Sanctacaris). == Distribution and taxonomy ==