Large spinose microfossils in Ediacaran rocks as resting stages of early animals
1. Phoebe A. Cohena,1,
2. Andrew H. Knollb,1 and
3. Robin B. Kodnerc
-Author Affiliations
1.
Departments of aEarth and Planetary Sciences and
2.
bOrganismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138; and
3.
cFriday Harbor Laboratories, University of Washington, Friday Harbor, WA 98250
1.
Contributed by Andrew H. KnollMarch 2, 2009 (sent for review December 9, 2008)
Abstract
Large (>100 μm), profusely ornamented microfossils comprise a distinctive paleontological component of sedimentary rocks deposited during the Ediacaran Period (635–542 million years ago). Smaller spinose fossils in Paleozoic rocks have commonly been interpreted as algal cysts or phycomata, but the Ediacaran populations differ from modern algal analogs in size, shape, ultrastructure, and internal contents. In contrast, cysts formed during the diapause egg-resting stages of many metazoans share features of size, ornamentation, and internal contents with large ornamented Ediacaran microfossils (LOEMs). Moreover, transmission electron microscopic observations of animal-resting cysts reveal a 3-layer wall ultrastructure comparable to that of LOEM taxa. Interpretation of these distinctive Ediacaran microfossils as resting stages in early metazoan life cycles offers additional perspectives on their functional morphology and stratigraphic distribution. Based on comparisons with modern marine invertebrates, the recalcitrant life stage represented by LOEMs is interpreted as an evolutionary response to prolonged episodes of bottom water anoxia in Ediacaran shelf and platform environments. As predicted by this hypothesis, the later Ediacaran disappearance of LOEM taxa coincides with geochemical evidence for a marked decline in the extent of oxygen-depleted waters impinging on continental shelves and platforms. Thus, the form, diversity, and stratigraphic range of LOEMs illuminate life cycle evolution in early animals as influenced by the evolving redox state of the oceans.
Dude. I'll get the paper once I am at work tomorrow.
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