Dromiacea

Dromiacea
Temporal range:
Dromia dormia (Dromioidea: Dromiidae) feeding on a sea urchin
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Decapoda
Suborder: Pleocyemata
Infraorder: Brachyura
Section: Dromiacea
De Haan, 1833
Superfamilies

Dromiacea is a group of crabs, ranked as a section. It contains 240 extant and nearly 300 extinct species. Dromiacea is the most basal grouping of Brachyura crabs, diverging the earliest in the evolutionary history, around the Late Triassic or Early Jurassic. Below is a cladogram showing Dromiacea's placement within Brachyura:

Brachyura

Dromiacea

Raninoida

Cyclodorippoida

Eubrachyura

Heterotremata

Thoracotremata

The larvae of Dromiacea resemble those of the Anomura more closely than those of other crabs. This may simply reflect their basal position in the crab phylogeny. The superfamily Eocarcinoidea, containing Eocarcinus and Platykotta, was previously considered to be a member of the Dromiacea, but has since been transferred to the Anomura.

The fossil record of Dromiacea reaches back at least as far as the Jurassic, and, if Imocaris is indeed a member, into the Carboniferous.

Dromiacea primarily consists of two groups of superfamilies - Dromioidea and Homoloidea. See the below cladogram:

Dromiacea
Dromioidea

Dromiidae (may be paraphyletic)

Dynomenidae

Homoloidea

Homolidae (paraphyletic)

Latreilliidae

Recent studies have found that some of the families may not be monophyletic, but rather paraphyletic.

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