Division of Earth Sciences, School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales 2351, Australia.
Nature. 2011 Dec 7;480(7376):237-40. doi: 10.1038/nature10689.
Until recently, intricate details of the optical design of non-biomineralized arthropod eyes remained elusive in Cambrian Burgess-Shale-type deposits, despite exceptional preservation of soft-part anatomy in such Konservat-Lagerstätten. The structure and development of ommatidia in arthropod compound eyes support a single origin some time before the latest common ancestor of crown-group arthropods, but the appearance of compound eyes in the arthropod stem group has been poorly constrained in the absence of adequate fossils. Here we report 2-3-cm paired eyes from the early Cambrian (approximately 515 million years old) Emu Bay Shale of South Australia, assigned to the Cambrian apex predator Anomalocaris. Their preserved visual surfaces are composed of at least 16,000 hexagonally packed ommatidial lenses (in a single eye), rivalling the most acute compound eyes in modern arthropods. The specimens show two distinct taphonomic modes, preserved as iron oxide (after pyrite) and calcium phosphate, demonstrating that disparate styles of early diagenetic mineralization can replicate the same type of extracellular tissue (that is, cuticle) within a single Burgess-Shale-type deposit. These fossils also provide compelling evidence for the arthropod affinities of anomalocaridids, push the origin of compound eyes deeper down the arthropod stem lineage, and indicate that the compound eye evolved before such features as a hardened exoskeleton. The inferred acuity of the anomalocaridid eye is consistent with other evidence that these animals were highly mobile visual predators in the water column. The existence of large, macrophagous nektonic predators possessing sharp vision--such as Anomalocaris--within the early Cambrian ecosystem probably helped to accelerate the escalatory 'arms race' that began over half a billion years ago.
直到最近,尽管 Konservat-Lagerstätten 中对软组织结构有极好的保存,但在寒武纪伯吉斯页岩型矿床中,节肢动物非生物矿化眼睛的复杂光学设计细节仍然难以捉摸。节肢动物复眼小眼结构和发育支持在冠群节肢动物最近的共同祖先之前的某个时间有单一起源,但在没有足够化石的情况下,节肢动物干群的复眼出现情况受到很大限制。本文报道了来自澳大利亚南部早寒武世(约 5.15 亿年前)埃姆湾页岩的一对 2-3 厘米长的眼睛,属于寒武纪顶级掠食者奇虾。它们保存的视觉表面由至少 16000 个六边形排列的小眼晶状体组成(单个眼睛),与现代节肢动物中最敏锐的复眼相媲美。这些标本显示出两种不同的埋藏模式,分别保存为氧化铁(黄铁矿后)和磷酸钙,这表明不同风格的早期成岩矿化可以在单个伯吉斯页岩型矿床中复制相同类型的细胞外组织(即外骨骼)。这些化石还为奇虾类节肢动物的亲缘关系提供了令人信服的证据,将复眼的起源推到了节肢动物的主干谱系更深的地方,并表明复眼在硬壳等特征之前就已经进化。奇虾眼睛的推断敏锐度与其他证据一致,即这些动物在水柱中是高度移动的视觉捕食者。在早期寒武纪生态系统中,存在具有敏锐视力的大型、吞噬性的海洋掠食者——如奇虾——可能有助于加速半个多亿年前开始的升级“军备竞赛”。