
Cystoidea was defined as a class of extinct paleozoic blastozoan echinoderms established to encompass stalked taxa that were neither crinoids nor blastoids. It was shown to be polyphyletic in the late 1960s but continues to be used even in recent (as of 2022) literature to discuss both rhombiferans and diploporitans.
Cystoidea was defined as a class of extinct paleozoic blastozoan echinoderms established to encompass stalked taxa that were neither crinoids nor blastoids. It was shown to be polyphyletic in the late 1960s but continues to be used even in recent (as of 2022) literature to discuss both rhombiferans and diploporitans.
==History== The concept of Cystoidea has a complex history, with many emendations from its original conception. Early versions included the homalozoans, eocrinoids, paracrinoids, blastoids, and edrioblastoids. By 1967 the modern usage encompassing only rhombiferans and diploporitans had been established, although questions remained regarding the possible inclusion of blastoids. Despite these removals, speculation continued as to whether cystoids were ancestral to blastoids, crinoids, or echinoids.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).