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Critical appraisal of tubular putative eumetazoans from the Ediacaran Weng'an Doushantuo biota

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Author(s)
Cunningham, John A
Vargas, Kelly
Pengju, Liu
Belivanova, Veneta
Marone, Federica
Martínez-Pérez, Carlos
Guizar-Sicairos, Manuel
Holler, Mirko
Bengtson, Stefan
Donoghue, Philip C J
Keywords
Institute of Biomedical Engineering
170 Ethics
610 Medicine & health

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/296197
Online Access
https://dx.doi.org/10.5167/uzh-120688
Abstract
Molecular clock analyses estimate that crown-group animals began diversifying hundreds of millions of years before the start of the Cambrian period. However, the fossil record has not yielded unequivocal evidence for animals during this interval. Some of the most promising candidates for Precambrian animals occur in the Weng'an biota of South China, including a suite of tubular fossils assigned to Sinocyclocyclicus, Ramitubus, Crassitubus and Quadratitubus, that have been interpreted as soft-bodied eumetazoans comparable to tabulate corals. Here, we present new insights into the anatomy, original composition and phylogenetic affinities of these taxa based on data from synchrotron radiation X-ray tomographic microscopy, ptychographic nanotomography, scanning electron microscopy and electron probe microanalysis. The patterns of deformation observed suggest that the cross walls of Sinocyclocyclicus and Quadratitubus were more rigid than those of Ramitubus and Crassitubus. Ramitubus and Crassitubus specimens preserve enigmatic cellular clusters at terminal positions in the tubes. Specimens of Sinocyclocyclicus and Ramitubus have biological features that might be cellular tissue or subcellular structures filling the spaces between the cross walls. These observations are incompatible with a cnidarian interpretation, in which the spaces between cross walls are abandoned parts of the former living positions of the polyp. The affinity of the Weng'an tubular fossils may lie within the algae.
Date
2015
Type
Journal Article
Identifier
oai:www.zora.uzh.ch:120688
http://dx.doi.org/10.5167/uzh-120688
info:doi/10.1098/rspb.2015.1169
info:pmid/26180072
Copyright/License
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Collections
Health Ethics

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