Yunnan Key Laboratory for Palaeobiology, Yunnan University, North Cuihu Road 2, Kunming, 650091, China.
MEC International Joint Laboratory for Palaeobiology and Palaeoenvironment, Yunnan University, Kunming, 650091, China.
BMC Evol Biol. 2019 Aug 6;19(1):165. doi: 10.1186/s12862-019-1491-3.
Artiopodan euarthropods represent common and abundant faunal components in sites with exceptional preservation during the Cambrian. The Chengjiang biota in South China contains numerous taxa that are exclusively known from this deposit, and thus offer a unique perspective on euarthropod diversity during the early Cambrian. One such endemic taxon is the non-trilobite artiopodan Sinoburius lunaris, which has been known for approximately three decades, but few details of its anatomy are well understood due to its rarity within the Chengjiang, as well as technical limitations for the study of these fossils. Furthermore, the available material does not provide clear information on the ventral organization of this animal, obscuring our understanding of phylogenetically significant details such as the appendages.
We employed X-ray computed tomography to study the non-biomineralized morphology of Sinoburius lunaris. Due to the replacement of the delicate anatomy with pyrite typical of Chengjiang fossils, computed tomography reveals substantial details of the ventral anatomy of Sinoburius lunaris, and allow us to observe in detail the three-dimensionally preserved appendicular organization of this taxon for the first time. The dorsal exoskeleton consists of a crescent-shaped head shield with well-developed genal spines, a thorax with seven freely articulating tergites, and a fused pygidium with lateral and median spines. The head bears a pair of ventral stalked eyes that are accommodated by dorsal exoskeletal bulges, and an oval elongate ventral hypostome. The appendicular organization of the head is unique among Artiopoda. The deutocerebral antennae are reduced, consisting of only five podomeres, and bear an antennal scale on the second podomere that most likely represents an exite rather than a true ramus. The head includes four post-antennal biramous limb pairs. The first two biramous appendages are differentiated from the rest. The first appendage pair consists of a greatly reduced endopod coupled with a greatly elongated exopod with a potentially sensorial function. The second appendage pair carries a more conventionally sized endopod, but also has an enlarged exopod. The remaining biramous appendages are homonomous in their construction, but decrease in size towards the posterior end of the body. They consist of a basipodite with ridge-like crescentic endites, an endopod with seven podomeres and a terminal claw, and a lamellae-bearing exopod with a slender shaft. Contrary to previous reports, we confirm the presence of segmental mismatch in Sinoburius lunaris, expressed as diplotergites in the thorax. Maximum parsimony and Bayesian phylogenetic analyses support the monophyly of Xandarellida within Artiopoda, and illuminate the internal relationships within this enigmatic clade. Our results allow us to propose a transformation series explaining the origin of archetypical xandarellid characters, such as the evolution of eye slits in Xandarella spectaculum and Phytophilaspis pergamena as derivates from the anterolateral notches in the head shield observed in Cindarella eucalla and Luohuilinella species. In this context, Sinoburius lunaris is found to feature several derived characters within the group, such as the secondary loss of eye slits and a high degree of appendicular tagmosis. Contrary to previous findings, our analyses strongly support close affinities between Sinoburius lunaris, Xandarella spectaculum and Phytophilaspis pergamena, although the precise relationships between these taxa are sensitive to different methodologies.
The revised morphology of Sinoburius lunaris, made possible through the use of computed tomography to resolve details of its three-dimensionally preserved appendicular anatomy, contributes towards an improved understanding of the morphology of this taxon and the evolution of Xandarellida more broadly. Our results indicate that Sinoburius lunaris possesses an unprecedented degree of appendicular tagmosis otherwise unknown within Artiopoda, with the implication that this iconic group of Palaeozoic euarthropods likely had a more complex ecology and functional morphology than previously considered. The application of computer tomographic techniques to the study of Chengjiang euarthropods holds exceptional promise for understanding the morphological diversity of these organisms, and also better reconstructing their phylogenetic relationships and evolutionary history.
节肢动物代表了在寒武纪时期具有特殊保存条件的地点中常见且丰富的动物类群。中国南方的澄江生物群包含了许多仅在该矿床中发现的特有分类群,因此为了解早期寒武纪时期节肢动物的多样性提供了独特的视角。其中一个特有分类群是无三叶虫的节肢动物 Sinoburius lunaris,它已经被人们了解了大约三十年,但由于其在澄江生物群中较为罕见,以及研究这些化石的技术限制,因此对其解剖结构的了解还很不完善。此外,现有的材料并不能提供有关该动物腹面组织的清晰信息,这阻碍了我们对其在系统发育上有意义的细节的理解,例如附肢。
我们采用 X 射线计算机断层扫描技术研究了 Sinoburius lunaris 的非生物矿化形态。由于典型的澄江化石中柔软的解剖结构被黄铁矿取代,因此计算机断层扫描揭示了 Sinoburius lunaris 腹面解剖结构的大量细节,并使我们能够首次详细观察到这个分类群的三维保存的附肢组织。背甲由新月形的头盾组成,头盾上有发达的侧刺,还有 7 个自由关节的胸节和融合的尾节,尾节上有侧刺和中刺。头部有一对腹侧具柄的眼睛,由背甲的凸起容纳,还有一个椭圆形的狭长腹下突。头部的附肢组织在节肢动物中是独一无二的。后脑触角退化,仅由 5 个体节组成,第二个体节上有触角鳞片,很可能代表一个外突而不是真正的分支。头部包括 4 对后触角双肢型附肢。前两对双肢型附肢与其他附肢不同。第一对附肢由一个与外肢结合的极度退化的内肢组成,外肢具有潜在的感觉功能,非常长。第二对附肢有一个更常规大小的内肢,但也有一个扩大的外肢。其余的双肢型附肢在结构上是同源的,但在身体的后端逐渐变小。它们由具有脊状新月形内叶的基节、有 7 个体节和末端爪的内肢以及带有薄片的外肢组成,外肢有一个细长的轴。与之前的报道相反,我们确认了 Sinoburius lunaris 存在体节错配现象,表现在胸部的双体节上。最大简约法和贝叶斯系统发育分析支持 Xandarellida 作为节肢动物的一个单系群,阐明了这个神秘类群内部的关系。我们的研究结果允许我们提出一个解释典型的 Xandarellida 特征起源的转换系列,例如 Xandarella spectaculum 和 Phytophilaspis pergamena 中的眼裂的演变,作为在 Cindarella eucalla 和 Luohuilinella 物种中观察到头盾前侧缺口的衍生物。在这种情况下,Sinoburius lunaris 被发现具有该组内的几个衍生特征,例如眼裂的二次丧失和高度的附肢体节化。与之前的发现相反,我们的分析强烈支持 Sinoburius lunaris、Xandarella spectaculum 和 Phytophilaspis pergamena 之间的密切亲缘关系,尽管这些分类群之间的确切关系对不同的方法学敏感。
通过使用计算机断层扫描来解析其三维保存的附肢解剖结构的细节,对 Sinoburius lunaris 的修订形态进行了研究,有助于提高对该分类群形态的理解,以及更广泛地了解 Xandarellida 的进化。我们的研究结果表明,Sinoburius lunaris 具有前所未有的附肢体节化程度,这在节肢动物中是未知的,这表明这个具有代表性的古生代节肢动物群可能具有比以前认为的更为复杂的生态和功能形态。计算机断层扫描技术在澄江节肢动物研究中的应用具有极好的前景,可以帮助我们更好地理解这些生物的形态多样性,以及更好地重建它们的系统发育关系和进化历史。