Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 2J7, Canada.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 2J7, Canada; Department of Natural History Palaeobiology, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, ON M5S 2C6, Canada; Department of Earth Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3B1, Canada.
Curr Biol. 2018 Jan 22;28(2):319-326.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.12.019.
Annelida is one of the most speciose (∼17,000 species) and ecologically successful phyla. Key to this success is their flexible body plan with metameric trunk segments and bipartite heads consisting of a prostomium bearing sensory structures and a peristomium containing the mouth. The flexibility of this body plan has traditionally proven problematic for reconstructing the evolutionary relationships within the Annelida. Although recent phylogenies have focused on resolving the interrelationships of the crown group [1-3], many questions remain regarding the early evolution of the annelid body plan itself, including the origin of the head [4]. Here we describe an abundant and exceptionally well-preserved polychaete with traces of putative neural and vascular tissues for the first time in a fossilized annelid. Up to three centimeters in length, Kootenayscolex barbarensis gen. et sp. nov. is described based on more than 500 specimens from Marble Canyon [5] and several specimens from the original Burgess Shale site (both in British Columbia, Canada). K. barbarensis possesses biramous parapodia along the trunk, bearing similar elongate and thin notochaetae and neurochaetae. A pair of large palps and one median antenna project from the anteriormost dorsal margin of the prostomium. The mouth-bearing peristomium bears neuropodial chaetae, a condition that is also inferred in Canadia and Burgessochaeta from the Burgess Shale, suggesting a chaetigorous origin for the peristomial portion of the head and a secondary loss of peristomial parapodia and chaetae in modern polychaetes.
环节动物门是物种最丰富的(∼17000 种)和生态成功的门之一。这种成功的关键是它们具有灵活的身体计划,身体由分节的躯干段和由带有感觉结构的原头和包含口的后头组成的二分头部组成。这种身体计划的灵活性传统上被证明对重建环节动物内部的进化关系具有挑战性。尽管最近的系统发育研究集中于解决冠群的相互关系[1-3],但关于环节动物身体计划本身的早期进化仍有许多问题,包括头部的起源[4]。在这里,我们首次描述了一种丰富且保存异常完好的多毛类动物,其中有神经和血管组织的痕迹,这在化石环节动物中尚属首次。Kootenayscolex barbarensis 属和种,其长度可达 3 厘米,基于来自 Marble Canyon 的 500 多个标本和来自原始 Burgess Shale 遗址的几个标本(均位于加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省)进行了描述。K. barbarensis 在躯干上具有双肢的附肢,具有相似的长而细的刚毛和神经刚毛。一对大触须和一个中央触角从前部最背侧的原头边缘伸出。带口的后头部带有触须,这在 Burgess Shale 的 Canadia 和 Burgessochaeta 中也可以推断出来,这表明头部的前口部分具有 chaetigorous 起源,并且现代多毛类动物的后口附肢和刚毛发生了次生丧失。