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6 December 2023 A pectinal tooth with peg sensilla from an Early Devonian scorpion
Jason A. Dunlop, Charles H. Wellman, Lorenzo Prendini, William A. Shear
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Abstract

A cuticle fragment found in an Early Devonian (Emsian) macerate from the Strathpeffer–Struie outlier in the Northern Highlands of Scotland represents the isolated pectinal tooth of a scorpion. This remarkable find includes a distinctive field of small projections in rounded sockets consistent with the peg sensilla of extant scorpions. This is the oldest evidence for the presence of these characteristic sensory organs, which in modern scorpions play an important role in chemo- and mechanoreception. The fossil indicates that some scorpions had developed anatomically modern pectinal teeth at least 395 million years ago, suggesting that the pectines of these early scorpions played a similar role, physiologically and behaviorally, to those of living species.

Jason A. Dunlop, Charles H. Wellman, Lorenzo Prendini, and William A. Shear "A pectinal tooth with peg sensilla from an Early Devonian scorpion," The Journal of Arachnology 51(3), 255-257, (6 December 2023). https://doi.org/10.1636/JoA-S-22-024
Received: 2 May 2022; Accepted: 3 January 2023; Published: 6 December 2023
KEYWORDS
Emsian
fossil
Pectines
Scorpiones
Scotland
sensory organ
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