Bicknell Russell D C, Pates Stephen
Palaeoscience Research Centre, School of Environmental and Rural Science, University of New England, Armidale, NSW, Australia.
Museum of Comparative Zoology and Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Boston, United States of America.
PeerJ. 2020 Feb 3;8:e8453. doi: 10.7717/peerj.8453. eCollection 2020.
Biomineralised trilobite exoskeletons provide a 250 million year record of abnormalities in one of the most diverse arthropod groups in history. One type of abnormality-repaired injuries-have allowed palaeobiologists to document records of Paleozoic predation, accidental damage, and complications in moulting experienced by the group. Although Cambrian trilobite injuries are fairly well documented, the illustration of new injured specimens will produce a more complete understanding of Cambrian prey items. To align with this perspective, nine new abnormal specimens displaying healed injuries from the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History collection are documented. The injury pattern conforms to the suggestion of lateralised prey defence or predator preference, but it is highlighted that the root cause for such patterns is obscured by the lumping of data across different palaeoecological and environmental conditions. Further studies of Cambrian trilobites with injuries represent a key direction for uncovering evidence for the Cambrian escalation event.
生物矿化的三叶虫外骨骼提供了一份长达2.5亿年的异常记录,该记录来自历史上最多样化的节肢动物群体之一。一种异常类型——修复损伤——使古生物学家能够记录该群体在古生代经历的捕食、意外损伤和蜕皮并发症的记录。尽管寒武纪三叶虫损伤有相当充分的记录,但新的受伤标本的展示将使人们对寒武纪猎物有更全面的了解。为了符合这一观点,本文记录了来自史密森国家自然历史博物馆藏品的九个显示愈合损伤的新异常标本。损伤模式符合侧向猎物防御或捕食者偏好的推测,但需要强调的是,由于不同古生态和环境条件下的数据汇总,这种模式的根本原因变得模糊不清。对有损伤的寒武纪三叶虫的进一步研究是揭示寒武纪升级事件证据的一个关键方向。