Saturday, May 17, 2014

Were There Arthropods in the Ediacaran?

The Ediacaran biota has been touted as one of the great mysteries of palaeontology. Comprising the latest part of the Precambrian era, the Ediacaran is generally believed to have given us the earliest known animal fossils. However, palaeontologists have disagreed on just how the Ediacaran fossils relate to modern animals (see McCall 2006 for an exhaustively detailed review). Some see the Ediacarans as including the ancestors of groups that remain with us today: jellyfish, corals, comb jellies, sponges. Others see Ediacarans as outside the modern lineages: ancient animal groups that were swept aside by more modern animals at the beginning of the Cambrian. And some have even questioned whether the Ediacarans were even animals at all, suggesting links instead to fungi or Foraminifera, or even that they were an entirely independent lineage unrelated to any modern multicellular organisms.

In 1996, Benjamin Waggoner proposed the name 'Cephalata' for a clade uniting the arthropods with two groups of Ediacaran organisms: the Sprigginidae and the Vendiamorpha. These are among the most undeniably animal-like of the Ediacarans. The sprigginids (including Spriggina shown at the top of the post) have an undivided 'head' followed by a long segmented body. The vendiamorphs are shield-like organisms that also show evidence for segment-like divisions behind the 'head', such as branching internal structures that may represent side-branches of an internal gut.


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