Archaeogastropoda

Archaeogastropoda (also known as Aspidobranchia[1]) was a taxonomic order of sea snails used in older classifications of gastropods, i.e. snails and slugs. Archeogastropoda are marine prosobranch gastropod mollusks, mainly herbivores, typically having two gills and a double-chambered heart, with the eggs and sperm discharged directly into the water. They were traditionally regarded as a relatively primitive group.

Archaeogastropoda
Temporal range: Late Cambrian–Recent
shells of Turbo spp.
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
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Archaeogastropoda

Thiele, 1925
Families

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This older classification of the gastropods is based on the classification of Johannes Thiele (1925). This classification was not based on true phylogenetic relationships, but on more general affinities between the groups. In the last few years, two new cladistic taxonomies of the gastropods have been published (in 1997 and 2005). This has led to an extensive reclassification of gastropod taxa. The taxon Archaeogastropoda was found to be a paraphyletic group, and therefore unacceptable in a strictly cladistic classification.

In the 1997 classification, most of the former Archaeogastropoda were included in:

A more detailed classification can be found on Gastropoda.

Older system of classification

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gollark: Writing an interpreter for Haskell 98 without extensions is, well, not *easy*, but probably pretty doable, but modern Haskell relies on Haskell 2010 with about 1 trillion extensions and sometimes bindings to C libraries.

See also

References

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