Butler Aodhán D, Cunningham John A, Budd Graham E, Donoghue Philip C J
School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Life Sciences Building, 24 Tyndall Avenue, Bristol BS8 1TQ, UK Department of Earth Sciences, Palaeobiology Programme, Uppsala University, Villavägen 16, 75236 Uppsala, Sweden
School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Life Sciences Building, 24 Tyndall Avenue, Bristol BS8 1TQ, UK Department of Palaeobiology and Nordic Centre for Earth Evolution, Swedish Museum of Natural History, 10405 Stockholm, Sweden.
Proc Biol Sci. 2015 Jun 7;282(1808):20150476. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2015.0476.
Exceptionally preserved fossils provide major insights into the evolutionary history of life. Microbial activity is thought to play a pivotal role in both the decay of organisms and the preservation of soft tissue in the fossil record, though this has been the subject of very little experimental investigation. To remedy this, we undertook an experimental study of the decay of the brine shrimp Artemia, examining the roles of autolysis, microbial activity, oxygen diffusion and reducing conditions. Our findings indicate that endogenous gut bacteria are the main factor controlling decay. Following gut wall rupture, but prior to cuticle failure, gut-derived microbes spread into the body cavity, consuming tissues and forming biofilms capable of mediating authigenic mineralization, that pseudomorph tissues and structures such as limbs and the haemocoel. These observations explain patterns observed in exceptionally preserved fossil arthropods. For example, guts are preserved relatively frequently, while preservation of other internal anatomy is rare. They also suggest that gut-derived microbes play a key role in the preservation of internal anatomy and that differential preservation between exceptional deposits might be because of factors that control autolysis and microbial activity. The findings also suggest that the evolution of a through gut and its bacterial microflora increased the potential for exceptional fossil preservation in bilaterians, providing one explanation for the extreme rarity of internal preservation in those animals that lack a through gut.
保存异常完好的化石为生命进化史提供了重要见解。微生物活动被认为在生物体腐烂以及化石记录中软组织的保存过程中都起着关键作用,尽管这方面的实验研究极少。为了弥补这一不足,我们对卤虫的腐烂过程进行了实验研究,考察了自溶、微生物活动、氧气扩散和还原条件所起的作用。我们的研究结果表明,肠道内源性细菌是控制腐烂的主要因素。在肠壁破裂后但角质层破坏之前,源自肠道的微生物扩散到体腔中,消耗组织并形成能够介导自生矿化作用的生物膜,使肢体和血腔等组织和结构形成假晶。这些观察结果解释了在保存异常完好的化石节肢动物中所观察到的模式。例如,肠道相对频繁地被保存下来,而其他内部解剖结构的保存则很罕见。它们还表明,源自肠道的微生物在内部解剖结构的保存中起关键作用,而且不同异常沉积之间的差异保存可能是由于控制自溶和微生物活动的因素所致。这些发现还表明,完整肠道及其细菌微生物群落的进化增加了两侧对称动物化石异常保存的可能性,为那些没有完整肠道的动物内部保存极为罕见提供了一种解释。