Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge CB2 3EQ, UK.
School of Earth Sciences, Life Sciences Building, University of Bristol, 24 Tyndall Avenue, Bristol BS8 4QQ, UK; British Geological Survey, Nicker Hill, Keyworth, Nottingham NG12 5GG, UK; Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PW, UK.
Curr Biol. 2020 Apr 6;30(7):1322-1328.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.01.052. Epub 2020 Mar 5.
Fossils of the Ediacaran macrobiota (∼571-539 mya) record phylogenetically diverse marine palaeocommunities, including early animals, which pre-date the "Cambrian Explosion" [1-4]. Benthic forms with a frondose gross morphology, assigned to the morphogroups Rangeomorpha [5] and Frondomorpha (see also Arboreomorpha) [6-8], are among the most temporally wide-ranging and environmentally tolerant members of the Ediacaran macrobiota [6] and dominated deep-marine ecosystems ∼571-560 mya [9-11]. Investigations into the morphology [12-14], palaeoecology [10, 15, 16], reproductive strategies [17, 18], feeding methods [9, 19], and morphogenesis of frondose taxa together constrain their phylogenetic position to the metazoan (for Rangeomorpha) or eumetazoan (e.g., Arborea) total groups [14, 20], but tighter constraint is currently lacking. Here, we describe fossils of abundant filamentous organic structures preserved among frond-dominated fossil assemblages in Newfoundland (Canada). The filaments constitute a prominent component of the ecosystems, and exhibit clear physical associations with at least seven frondose taxa. Individual specimens of one uniterminal rangeomorph taxon appear to be directly connected by filaments across distances of centimeters to meters. Such physical linkages are interpreted to reflect evidence for stolonic connections: a conclusion with potential implications for the phylogenetic placement and palaeoecology of frondose organisms. Consideration of extant stoloniferous organisms suggests that Ediacaran frondose taxa were likely clonal and resurrects the possibility that they may have been colonial (e.g., [21, 22]). VIDEO ABSTRACT.
埃迪卡拉纪后生生物群(约 571-539 百万年前)的化石记录了系统发育上多种多样的海洋古群落,包括早于“寒武纪大爆发”的早期动物[1-4]。具有叶状总体形态的底栖形式,被分配到形态群 Rangeomorpha[5]和 Frondomorpha(也见 Arboreomorpha)[6-8],是埃迪卡拉纪后生生物群中时间跨度最广和环境适应性最强的成员之一[6],并在约 571-560 百万年前主导着深海生态系统[9-11]。对叶状生物的形态学[12-14]、古生态学[10、15、16]、繁殖策略[17、18]、摄食方式[9、19]和叶状生物的形态发生的研究共同限制了它们在系统发育上的位置,即后生动物(对于 Rangeomorpha)或真后生动物(例如,Arborea)总群[14、20],但目前缺乏更紧密的限制。在这里,我们描述了在纽芬兰(加拿大)的叶状化石组合中保存的大量丝状有机结构的化石。这些丝状结构构成了生态系统的一个重要组成部分,并且与至少七种叶状生物具有明显的物理关联。一个单位末端 Rangeomorpha 分类群的个别标本似乎通过丝状结构直接连接,距离可达厘米到米。这种物理连接被解释为 stolonic 连接的证据:这一结论可能对叶状生物的系统发育位置和古生态学有潜在影响。对现存 stoloniferous 生物的考虑表明,埃迪卡拉纪叶状生物可能是克隆的,并重新提出了它们可能是群居的可能性(例如,[21、22])。视频摘要。