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Endoceras (Ancient Greek for "inner horn") is an extinct genus of large, straight shelled cephalopods that gives its name to the Nautiloid order Endocerida. The genus lived during the middle and upper Ordovician 470 to 443 million years ago. The cross section in the mature portion is slightly wider than high, but is narrower laterally in the young.
A molluscivore is a carnivorous animal that specialises in feeding on molluscs such as gastropods, bivalves, brachiopods and cephalopods.Known molluscivores include numerous predatory (and often cannibalistic) molluscs, (e.g.octopuses, murexes, decollate snails and oyster drills), arthropods such as crabs and firefly larvae, and, vertebrates such as fish, birds and mammals. [1]
A potential Cenozoic orthocone is known in Antarcticeras, which may be a descendant of the orthoceratoids and has an orthocone-like shell that is thought to have been weakly mineralized and internal, in contrast to the external, fully-mineralized shells of earlier orthocones—an example of convergent evolution with the coleoids. [2]
Endoceratidae is a family of large to very large straight shelled nautiloid cephalopods belonging to the order Endocerida that lived during the Middle and Late Ordovician. They include the largest known Paleozoic invertebrates, represented by Endoceras and Cameroceras. [1] [2]
The Nautilida constitute a large and diverse order of generally coiled nautiloid cephalopods that began in the mid Paleozoic and continues to the present with a single family, the Nautilidae which includes two genera, Nautilus and Allonautilus, with six species.
Cameroceras is a cephalopod, the same group of molluscs that includes the octopuses, squids and cuttlefish. The only portion of the animal to fossilize is the shell (formally known as the conch). The only portion of the animal to fossilize is the shell (formally known as the conch).
Neocoleoidea (most living cephalopods) Coleoidea [ 1 ] [ 2 ] or Dibranchiata is one of the two subclasses of cephalopods containing all the various taxa popularly thought of as "soft-bodied" or "shell-less" (i.e. octopus , squid and cuttlefish ).