posted on 2015-01-26, 12:25authored byXianguang Hou, Mark Williams, Derek J. Siveter, David J. Siveter, Sarah Gabbott, David Holwell, Thomas H. P. Harvey
Nidelric pugio gen. et sp. nov. from the Cambrian Series 2 Heilinpu Formation, Chengjiang Lagerstatte, Yunnan Province, China, is an ovoid, sac-like metazoan that bears single-element spines on its surface. N. pugio shows no trace of a gut, coelom, anterior differentiation, appendages, or internal organs that would
suggest a bilateral body plan. Instead, the sac-like morphology invites comparison with the radially symmetrical chancelloriids. However, the single-element spines of N. pugio are atypical of the complex multi-element spine rosettes borne by most chancelloriids and N. pugio may signal the ancestral chancelloriid state, in which the spines had not yet fused. Alternatively, N. pugio may represent a group of radial metazoans that are discrete from chancelloriids. Whatever its precise phylogenetic position, N. pugio expands the known disparity of Cambrian scleritome-bearing animals, and provides a new model for reconstructing scleritomes from isolated microfossils.
History
Citation
Hou, X. et al. A chancelloriid-like metazoan from the early Cambrian Chengjiang Lagersta¨tte, China. Sci. Rep. 4, 7340; DOI:10.1038/srep07340 (2014)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Geology