Amplecrobelua mating ritual.
Amplectobelua was a relatively large (up to 90 cm) early arthropod during Early Cambrian.
I portrayed it digging through the sediment as a bizzare mating ritual akin to modern pufferfish.

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Finland
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Brazil
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Austria
seen from United States

seen from Austria
seen from Vietnam
seen from United States
Amplecrobelua mating ritual.
Amplectobelua was a relatively large (up to 90 cm) early arthropod during Early Cambrian.
I portrayed it digging through the sediment as a bizzare mating ritual akin to modern pufferfish.
bugtober 22, we step back into the past...... amplectobelua symbrachiata
The Amplectobelua (1995)
Phylum : Arthropoda Class : Dinocaridida Order : Radiodonta Family : Anomalocarididae Genus : Amplectobelua Species : A. symbrachiata, A. stephenensis
Middle Cambria (525 Ma)
Canada and China (map)
Amplectobelua is an extinct genus of late Early Cambrian anomalocaridid, a group of stem arthropods that lived as free-swimming predators during the first half of the Paleozoic Era. Like other anomalocaridids, Amplectobelua had a pair of jointed grasping appendages, large eyes, a limbless body, and a series of fins extending down the body. It was smaller than the related Anomalocaris, however, and had a specialized grasping appendage, in which the spine on the fourth segment hooked forward to oppose the tip of the appendage, allowing it to grasp prey like the pincer of a crab. The fins differ as well; the front fins are very long and slender, while the middle pair of tail fins are specialized into a pair of long streamers, or furci.
Two species are known, Amplectobelua symbrachiata from the Chengjiang biota and Amplectobelua stephenensis from the later Burgess Shale. A. symbrachiata is known from complete specimens, while A. stephenensis is known only from isolated claws. A. stephenensis is more advanced, with the pincer being more specialized for grasping: the fourth spine is larger and the spines on outer segments are reduced.