posted on 2014-10-30, 12:14authored byXianguang Hou, Mark Williams, David J. Siveter, Derek J. Siveter, Sarah Gabbott, David A. Holwell, Thomas H. P. Harvey
Nidelric pugiogen. et sp. nov.
from the Cambrian
Series 2 Heilinpu Formation,
Chengjiang Lagerstätte, 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.