Ichnological evidence for meiofaunal bilaterians from the terminal Ediacaran and earliest Cambrian of Brazil

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作者
Luke A. Parry
Paulo C. Boggiani
Daniel J. Condon
Russell J. Garwood
Juliana de M. Leme
Duncan McIlroy
Martin D. Brasier
Ricardo Trindade
Ginaldo A. C. Campanha
Mírian L. A. F. Pacheco
Cleber Q. C. Diniz
Alexander G. Liu
机构
[1] Royal Ontario Museum,Palaeobiology
[2] University of Toronto,Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
[3] Universidade de São Paulo,Instituto de Geociências
[4] British Geological Survey,NERC Isotope Geosciences Laboratory
[5] University of Manchester,School of Earth and Environmental Sciences
[6] Natural History Museum,Department of Earth Sciences
[7] Memorial University of Newfoundland,Department of Earth Sciences
[8] University of Oxford,Department of Earth Sciences
[9] Universidade de São Paulo,Departamento de Geofisica, Instituto de Astronomia, Geofísica e Ciências Atmosféricas
[10] Federal University of São Carlos. Rodovia João Leme dos Santos - Parque Reserva Fazenda Imperial,Department of Biology
[11] University of Cambridge,Department of Earth Sciences
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摘要
The evolutionary events during the Ediacaran–Cambrian transition (~541 Myr ago) are unparalleled in Earth history. The fossil record suggests that most extant animal phyla appeared in a geologically brief interval, with the oldest unequivocal bilaterian body fossils found in the Early Cambrian. Molecular clocks and biomarkers provide independent estimates for the timing of animal origins, and both suggest a cryptic Neoproterozoic history for Metazoa that extends considerably beyond the Cambrian fossil record. We report an assemblage of ichnofossils from Ediacaran–Cambrian siltstones in Brazil, alongside U–Pb radioisotopic dates that constrain the age of the oldest specimens to 555–542 Myr. X-ray microtomography reveals three-dimensionally preserved traces ranging from 50 to 600 μm in diameter, indicative of small-bodied, meiofaunal tracemakers. Burrow morphologies suggest they were created by a nematoid-like organism that used undulating locomotion to move through the sediment. This assemblage demonstrates animal–sediment interactions in the latest Ediacaran period, and provides the oldest known fossil evidence for meiofaunal bilaterians. Our discovery highlights meiofaunal ichnofossils as a hitherto unexplored window for tracking animal evolution in deep time, and reveals that both meiofaunal and macrofaunal bilaterians began to explore infaunal niches during the late Ediacaran.
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页码:1455 / 1464
页数:9
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