Terropterus xiushanensis was described in 2021 by Han Wang, Jason Dunlop, Zhikun Gai, Xiaojie Lei, Edmund A. Jarzembowski and Bo Wang, based on fossils recovered from
Llandovery-age (Early
Silurian) deposits in the
Xiushan Formation in
Xiushan,
South China. Several fossils were assigned to the new
genus and species, including a
telson (last segment of the body), a genital operculum (a structure on the underside of the body), including the genital appendage (the reproductive organ), as well as several prosomal (attached to the
prosoma; head) appendages and coxae. A fossil preserving the second to sixth pair of appendages, enumerated NIGP 174785, was designated as the
holotype specimen, with the other fossils designated as
paratypes. In addition to the fossils referred to
T. xiushanensis, Wang and colleagues also described two larger, but more incomplete fossil specimens from Llandovery-age deposits (nearly of the exact same age as the Xiushan deposits) in the
Fentou Formation in
Wuhan,
Central China. These fossils included a portion of the preabdomen (portion of the body preceding the abdomen), a
carapace (head plate) and parts of the great third appendage. Because the spine patterns of the appendage and the proportions of the joints in the limb are more or less the same as in Xiushan fossils, they were referred, tentatively, to ‘
Terropterus sp.’. Wang and colleagues noted that it was difficult to determine whether these fossils represent a different second species of
Terropterus, or (since they were larger) an older individual of
T. xiushanensis. Differences to the other fossils were noted to be much larger size as well as the spines on the appendage being proportionally longer and arranged more sparsely. Prior to the discovery of
Terropterus, only one lanarkopterid genus was known,
Lanarkopterus, from Europe. In
Lanarkopterus's time, Europe was part of the northern continent
Laurussia. This meant that the morphological variety, evolutionary history and the geographical range of the group was relatively poorly known. The discovery of
Terropterus, the only lanarkopterid known from the southern continent of Gondwana, as well as the oldest representative of the family, not only expanded knowledge on the morphological variety within the group but also extended the known temporal and geographical range. In particular, the discovery of
Terropterus, and the possibility of finding more fossil material in the future, was noted by Wang and colleagues as indicating that the group may have had a more cosmopolitan (worldwide) distribution than previously assumed. == Classification ==