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Last one for the day, the Tully Monster, Tullimonstrum gregarium. I was at one point interested in this species, but then decided against it when it was considered a chordate related to lampreys. Apparently, at the time of this writing, it is now back among the invertebrates. Because of its enigmatic standing I will collect a couple figures that become available.This first one was a 'freebie' given to me by Pat May (Paleocasts) when I ordered a bunch of arthropods from him.
Quote from: bmathison1972 on October 18, 2017, 06:35:23 PMLast one for the day, the Tully Monster, Tullimonstrum gregarium. I was at one point interested in this species, but then decided against it when it was considered a chordate related to lampreys. Apparently, at the time of this writing, it is now back among the invertebrates. Because of its enigmatic standing I will collect a couple figures that become available.This first one was a 'freebie' given to me by Pat May (Paleocasts) when I ordered a bunch of arthropods from him.It turns out the original paper put its thumb on the scale by sampling non-vertebrate taxa very poorly in the phylogeny. They almost couldn't help but recover it as a vertebrate. So it probably isn't one, but it does have a few curious vertebrate-esque features like pigment stains that look suspiciously like retinas.
Another fancy rhinoceros beetle, Scapenes australis. [updated 11/23/2017]1. DeAgostini (World Insect Data Book).2. Sega
Quote from: bmathison1972 on March 18, 2017, 12:35:54 PMAnother fancy rhinoceros beetle, Scapenes australis. [updated 11/23/2017]1. DeAgostini (World Insect Data Book).2. SegaYou have portrait the wrong SEGA beetle here. There is a small Scapenes australis, but this is the Strategus mandibularis ;-)
:-) to many figurines? ;-)