Cloudinidae: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Group of extinct aquatic animals}} |
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{{Taxobox |
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{{automatic taxobox |
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| color = pink |
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| fossil_range = {{Fossil range |555|529|refs=<ref name="Yang2016">{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.precamres.2016.09.016|title=Transitional Ediacaran–Cambrian small skeletal fossil assemblages from South China and Kazakhstan: Implications for chronostratigraphy and metazoan evolution|journal=Precambrian Research|volume=285|pages=202–215|year=2016|last1=Yang|first1=Ben|last2=Steiner|first2=Michael|last3=Zhu|first3=Maoyan|last4=Li|first4=Guoxiang|last5=Liu|first5=Jianni|last6=Liu|first6=Pengju|bibcode=2016PreR..285..202Y}}</ref>}} |
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| image = |
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| image = Cloudina.svg |
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| image_caption = |
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| image_upright = 0.5 |
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| name = Cloudina |
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| taxon = Cloudinidae |
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| fossil_range = [[Ediacaran]] |
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| authority = Hahn and Pflug, 1985 |
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| genus = Cloudina |
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| genus_authority = Germs 1972 |
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| subdivision_ranks = Species |
| subdivision_ranks = Species |
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| subdivision = |
| subdivision = {{nested taxon list |
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| ''Cloudina ''| Germs, 1972 |{{species list |
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| Cl. hartmannae|Germs 1972 |
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| Cl. riemkeae |Germs 1972 |
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| regnum = [[Animal]]ia |
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| Cl. lucianoi |Beurlen & Sommer, 1957) Zaine & Fairchild, 1985 |
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| phylum = [[Archaeocyatha]] |
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| Cl. sinensis |Zhang, Li et Dung, 1992 |
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| phylum_authority = Vologdin 1937 |
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| Cl. carinata |Cortijo, Musa, Jensena et Palacios, 2009 |
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| classis = [[Cribriocyathea]] |
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| Cl. ningqiangensis |Cai ''et al.'', 2017 |
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| classis_authority = Vologdin 1961 |
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| Cl. xuanjiangpingensis |Cai ''et al.'', 2017 |
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| ordo = [[Pterocyathida]] |
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}} |
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| ordo_authority = Jankauskas 1967 |
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| ''Conotubus'' | Zhang and Lin 1986 |{{species list |
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| familia='''Cloudinidae''' |
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| Co. hemiannulatus |Zhang and Lin 1986 |
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| familia_authority={{fact|date=April 2007}} |
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| (others?) |
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}}'''Cloudinids''' ('''''Cloudina''''') are an extinct [[animal]] [[genus]] that formed small tubelike or conical [[fossil]]s consisting of "funnel deeply nested in funnel" segments of calcareous material. What the animal itself looked like is still unknown. ''Cloudinids'' were widely distributed. They are quite abundant in some deposits. They are the earliest common animal form with a calcareous shell. The name ''Cloudina'' honors the 20th century geologist and paleontologist [[Preston Cloud]]. It was first discovered by GJB Germs in 1972. |
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}} |
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|''Acuticocloudina'' |Hahn and Pflug, 1985 |
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}} |
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| synonyms = * ''Aulophycus lucianoi'' <small>Beurlen & Sommer 1957</small> = ''C. waldei'' <small>Hahn & Pflug, 1985</small> = '''''C. lucianoi''''' <small>Zaine & Fairchild, 1985</small> |
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}} |
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The '''cloudinids''', an early [[metazoan]] [[Family (biology)|family]] containing the [[genus|genera]] '''''Acuticocloudina''''', '''''Cloudina''''' and '''''Conotubus''''', lived in the late [[Ediacaran]] [[Period (geology)|period]] about 550 million years ago.<ref name="NYT-20200110">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/10/science/fossil-guts-intestines.html|title=Fossil Reveals Earth's Oldest Known Animal Guts - The find in a Nevada desert revealed an intestine inside a creature that looks like a worm made of a stack of ice cream cones.|last=Joel|first=Lucas|date=10 January 2020|work=[[The New York Times]]|access-date=10 January 2020}}</ref><ref name="NAT-20200110" /> and became extinct at the base of the [[Cambrian]].<ref name="Yang2016">{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.precamres.2016.09.016|title=Transitional Ediacaran–Cambrian small skeletal fossil assemblages from South China and Kazakhstan: Implications for chronostratigraphy and metazoan evolution|journal=Precambrian Research|volume=285|pages=202–215|year=2016|last1=Yang|first1=Ben|last2=Steiner|first2=Michael|last3=Zhu|first3=Maoyan|last4=Li|first4=Guoxiang|last5=Liu|first5=Jianni|last6=Liu|first6=Pengju|bibcode=2016PreR..285..202Y}}</ref> They formed millimetre-scale conical [[fossil]]s consisting of [[calcareous]] cones nested within one another; the appearance of the organism itself remains unknown. The name ''Cloudina'' honors the 20th-century geologist and paleontologist [[Preston Cloud]].<ref name=Description /> |
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''Cloudina'' varies in size from a diameter of 0.3 to 6.5 mm, and 8 to 150 mm in length.<ref name=Description>{{cite journal|author=Germs, G.J.B. | title=New shelly fossils from Nama Group, South West Africa | journal=American Journal of Science | date=October 1972 | volume=272 | pages=752-761}}</ref>. It is a tube made from microscopic [[calcite]] crystals, that was likely to be embedded in an organic matrix. The tube is curved or sinuous, and occasionally bifurcates. The tube walls are 8 to 50 micrometers thick. ''Cloudina'' occurred in [[calcium carbonate]] rich areas of [[stromatolite]] reefs. It is found with ''[[Namacalathus]]'', which like ''Cloudina'' was "weakly skeletal" and solitary, and ''[[Namapoikia]]'', which was "robustly skeletal" and and formed sheets on open surfaces.<ref>[http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2005AM/finalprogram/abstract_90560.htm Neoproterozoic Microbial-Metazoan Reefs, Nama Region, Namibia] - abstract retrieved [[January 13]], [[2007]]</ref> |
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Cloudinids comprise two genera: ''Cloudina'' itself is mineralized, whereas ''Conotubus'' is at best weakly mineralized, whilst sharing the same "funnel-in-funnel" construction.<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1130/G38157.1|title=The end of the Ediacaran: Two new exceptionally preserved body fossil assemblages from Mount Dunfee, Nevada, USA|journal=Geology|volume=44|issue=11|pages=911|year=2016|last1=Smith|first1=E.F.|last2=Nelson|first2=L.L.|last3=Strange|first3=M.A.|last4=Eyster|first4=A.E.|last5=Rowland|first5=S.M.|last6=Schrag|first6=D.P.|last7=MacDonald|first7=F.A.|bibcode=2016Geo....44..911S}}</ref> |
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''Cloudina'' are characteristic of the so-called "[[Small Shelly Fauna]]" in the final [[Neoproterozoic]] period, called the [[Ediacaran]], and disappeared in the [[extinction event]] that marks the [[Precambrian]] - [[Cambrian]] boundary, most recently dated at 542 million years old.<ref name=Amthor2003>{{cite journal |
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| author = Amthor, J.E. |
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| coauthors = Grotzinger, J.P., Schroder, S., Bowring, S.A., Ramezani, J., Martin, M.W., Matter, A. |
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| year = 2003 |
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| title = Extinction of Cloudina and Namacalathus at the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary in Oman |
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| journal = Geology |
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| volume = 31 |
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| issue = 5 |
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| pages = 431-434 |
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| issn = |
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| doi = |
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| url = |
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| accessdate = 2007-04-24 |
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}}</ref> The extinctions set the stage for the [[Cambrian Explosion|Cambrian explosion]] of life-forms. |
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Cloudinids had a wide geographic range, reflected in the present distribution of localities in which their fossils are found, and are an abundant component of some deposits. They never appear in the same layers as soft-bodied [[Ediacaran biota]], but the fact that some sequences contain cloudinids and Ediacaran biota in alternating layers suggests that these groups had different environmental preferences. It has been suggested that cloudinids lived embedded in [[microbial mat]]s, growing new cones to avoid being buried by silt. However no specimens have been found embedded in mats, and their mode of life is still an unresolved question. |
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The [[Taxonomy (biology)|classification]] of the cloudinids has proved difficult: they were initially regarded as [[polychaete]] worms, and then as coral-like [[cnidarian]]s on the basis of what look like [[Budding|buds]] on some specimens. Current scientific opinion is divided between classifying them as polychaetes and regarding it as unsafe to classify them as members of any broader grouping. In 2020, a new study of pyritized specimens from the [[Wood Canyon Formation]] in Nevada showed the presence of [[Nephrozoa]]n type [[Gastrointestinal tract|guts]], the oldest on record, supporting the [[bilateria]]n interpretation.<ref name="NAT-20200110">{{cite journal |author=Schiffbauer, James D. |display-authors=et al. |title=Discovery of bilaterian-type through-guts in cloudinomorphs from the terminal Ediacaran Period |date=10 January 2020 |journal=[[Nature Communications]] |volume=11 |number=205 |pages=205 |doi=10.1038/s41467-019-13882-z |pmid=31924764 |pmc=6954273 |bibcode=2020NatCo..11..205S }}</ref> |
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Exactly what kind of animal it was is unknown; it resembles [[serpulid]] [[polychaete]] [[annelid]] worms and [[pogonophora]]n worms, and has similarities to the trace fossils ''[[Salterella]]'' and ''[[Cornulites]]''. Its lack of bilateral or radial symmetry rules out [[Coelenterata]]n affinities. |
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Cloudinids are important in the history of animal evolution for two reasons. They are among the earliest and most abundant of the [[small shelly fossils]] with [[Mineralization (biology)|mineralized]] [[skeleton]]s, and therefore feature in the debate about why such skeletons first appeared in the Late Ediacaran. The most widely supported answer is that their shells are a defense against predators, as some ''Cloudina'' specimens from China bear the marks of multiple attacks, which suggests they survived at least a few of them. The holes made by predators are approximately proportional to the size of the ''Cloudina'' specimens, and ''[[Sinotubulites]]'' fossils, which are often found in the same beds, have so far shown no such holes. These two points suggest that predators attacked in a selective manner, and the [[evolutionary arms race]] which this indicates is commonly cited as a cause of the [[Cambrian explosion]] of animal [[Biodiversity|diversity]] and complexity. |
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==Ecology== |
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==Morphology== |
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The tubes often appear to form colonies, although they are sometimes found in more isolated situations. The assimilation of large, sometimes monospecific, colonies can be attributed to the lack of significant predation.<ref name=Description /> |
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[[File:Cloudina internal 01.png|thumb|left | 100px | Cutaway diagram of ''Cloudina'' showing "living space" within the shell.]] |
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''Cloudina'' varies in size from a diameter of 0.3 to 6.5 mm, and 8 to 150 mm in length.<ref name=Description>{{cite journal |
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| doi=10.2475/ajs.272.8.752 |
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| author=Germs, G.J.B. | title=New shelly fossils from Nama Group, South West Africa |
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| journal=American Journal of Science |date=October 1972 | volume=272 | pages=752–761 |
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| issue=8 |
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| bibcode=1972AmJS..272..752G}}</ref> Fossils consist of a series of stacked vase-like [[calcite]] tubes, whose original mineral composition is unknown,<ref name="Porter2007">{{cite journal |
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| journal=Science | date= 1 June 2007 |volume= 316 |issue=5829 |doi= 10.1126/science.1137284 |
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| title= Seawater Chemistry and Early Carbonate Biomineralization |author=Porter, S.M. |
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| pages = 1302 | pmid= 17540895 | bibcode=2007Sci...316.1302P |
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| s2cid= 27418253 }}</ref> but inferred to be high-magnesium calcite.<ref>1. Zhuravlev, A.Y., Wood, R.A., and Penny, A.M. (2015). Ediacaran skeletal metazoan interpreted as a lophophorate. Proc. R. Soc. B 282, 20151860. Available at: http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/lookup/doi/10.1098/rspb.2015.1860.</ref> Each cone traps a significant pore space beneath it, and stacks eccentrically in the one below. This results in a ridged external appearance. The overall tube is curved or sinuous, and occasionally branches. The tube walls are 8 to 50 micrometers thick, usually lying in the range 10 to 25 μm.<ref name="Grant1990" /> Although it used to be thought that the tubes had test-tube like bases,<ref name="Description" /> detailed three-dimensional reconstruction has shown that the tubes had an open base.<ref name="Miller" /> There is evidence that the tube was flexible.<ref name="Brain2001" /> |
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==Classification== |
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''Cloudina'' is often found in association with microbial [[stromatolites]] which are limited to shallow water; their isotopic composition<ref>Ca/Mg ratios</ref> suggests that water temperatures were relatively cool. |
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''Cloudina'' was originally classified in 1972 as a member of the Cribricyathea, a class known from the Early Cambrian.<ref name="Description" /> Glaessner (1976) accepted this classification and also |
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proposed that ''Cloudina'' was similar to the [[annelid]] worms, particularly [[serpulid]] [[polychaete]]s.<ref>{{cite journal |
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Their growth shows a periodic structure, with new layers added periodically; the ridges formed are often of varying width, suggesting a non-constant growth rate. One specimen of ''Cloudina hartmannae'' displays budding,<ref name=Description /> which may suggest asexual reproduction.<ref name=Hua2005>{{cite journal |
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| author=Glaessner, M. F. | year=1976 |
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| title=Early Phanerozoic annelid worms and their geological and biological significance |
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| coauthors = Chen, Z., Yuan, X., Zhang, L., Xiao, S. |
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| journal=Journal of the Geological Society | volume=132 | pages=259–275 |
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| year = 2005 |
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| doi=10.1144/gsjgs.132.3.0259 |
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| issue=3 |
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| bibcode=1976JGSoc.132..259G| s2cid=130795227 |
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}}</ref> However, Hahn & Pflug (1985) and Conway Morris ''et al.''. (1990) doubted both Germs' and Glaessner's suggested relationships, and were unwilling to classify it to anything more than its own [[Family (biology)|family]], Cloudinidae.<ref>{{cite journal |
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|author1=Hahn, G. |author2=H. D. Pflug | year=1985 |
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| title=Die Cloudinidae n. fam., Kalk-Röhren aus dem Vendium und Unter-Kambrium |
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| journal=Senckenbergiana Lethaea | volume=65 | pages=413–431 |
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}}</ref><ref name=Conway1990 /> Some specimens of ''Cloudina hartmannae'' display budding,<ref name=Description /> which implies asexual reproduction.<ref name=Hua2005>{{cite journal |
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| author = Hua, H. |author2=Chen, Z.|author3=Yuan, X.|author4=Zhang, L.|author5=Xiao, S. | year = 2005 |
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| title = Skeletogenesis and asexual reproduction in the earliest biomineralizing animal Cloudina |
| title = Skeletogenesis and asexual reproduction in the earliest biomineralizing animal Cloudina |
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| journal = Geology |
| journal = Geology | volume = 33 | issue = 4 | pages = 277–280 | doi = 10.1130/G21198.1 |
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|bibcode = 2005Geo....33..277H }}</ref> On this basis Grant (1990) classified ''Cloudina'' as a coral-like [[cnidarian]].<ref name="Grant1990" /> Since the tubes had an open base, creating a single living space rather than a series of separate chambers, ''Cloudina'' is more likely to be a [[stem group]] polychaete worm,<ref name=Miller /> in other words an evolutionary "aunt" or "cousin" of more recent polychaetes. This interpretation is reinforced by the even distribution of bore-holes made by predators.<ref name=HUA2003 /><ref name=Bengtson1992 /> However, as with so many [[Ediacaran]] life forms, there is great debate surrounding its position in the tree of life, and classification between the [[kingdom (biology)|kingdom]] and family level may be unwise.<ref name=Grant1990>{{cite journal | author = Grant, S.W. | year = 1990 | title = Shell structure and distribution of Cloudina, a potential index fossil for the terminal Proterozoic | journal = American Journal of Science | issue = 290–A | pages = 261–294 | url = http://lib.bioinfo.pl/pmid:11538690 | access-date = 2008-07-19 | pmid = 11538690 | volume = 290-A | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110522041703/http://lib.bioinfo.pl/pmid:11538690 | archive-date = 2011-05-22 | url-status = dead }}</ref><ref name=Conway1990 /><ref name=VinnZaton2012>{{cite journal |
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| volume = 33 |
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| author = Vinn, O. |
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| author2 = Zatoń, M. |
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| year = 2012 |
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| title = Inconsistencies in proposed annelid affinities of early biomineralized organism Cloudina (Ediacaran): structural and ontogenetic evidences |
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| doi = |
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| journal = Carnets de Géologie |
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| url = |
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| volume = CG2012_A03 |
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| pages = 39–47 |
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| doi = 10.4267/2042/46095 |
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| doi-access = |
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}}</ref> |
}}</ref> |
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<!-- ******* No ref for this, can't find one The two species of ''Cloudina'' are only distinguished on the basis of diameter, and it is possible that they in fact represent male and female forms of the same species.******** --> |
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==Ecology== |
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Around 20% of ''Cloudina'' fossils contain [[predator]]y borings 15–85 µm in diameter.<ref name=HUA2003>{{Cite journal |
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[[File:Cloudina NT.jpg|thumb| Restoration of ''Cloudina hartmannae'' with speculative mouth parts]] |
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| author = HUA, H. |
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''Cloudina'' is frequently found in association with [[stromatolites]], which are limited to shallow water; their [[isotope analysis|isotopic composition]]<ref>Ca/Mg ratios</ref> suggests that water temperatures were relatively cool. They have also been found in normal sea-floor sediments, suggesting that they were not only restricted to dwelling on microbial mounds.<ref name=domke2009>{{Walcott 2009|domke}}</ref> On the other hand, ''Cloudina'' has never been found in the same layers as the soft-bodied [[Ediacara biota]], but ''Cloudina'' and Ediacara biota have been found in alternating layers. This suggests that the two groups of organisms had different environmental preferences.<ref name="Miller" /> |
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| coauthors = PRATT, B.R., ZHANG, L.U.Y.I. |
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| year = 2003 |
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In many ''Cloudina'' specimens the ridges formed by the cones are of varying width, which suggests the organisms grew at a variable rate. [[Adolf Seilacher]] suggests that they adhered to [[microbial mat]]s, and that the growth phases represented the organism keeping pace with sedimentation—growing through new material deposited on it that would otherwise bury it. Kinks in the developing tube are easily explained by the mat falling slightly from the horizontal.<ref name=Seilacher1999>{{cite journal |
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| journal = Palaios |
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| author = Seilacher, A. | year = 1999 | title = Biomat-related lifestyles in the Precambrian |
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| title = Borings in Cloudina Shells: Complex Predator-Prey Dynamics in the Terminal Neoproterozoic |
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| journal = PALAIOS | volume = 14 | issue = 1 | pages = 86–93 |
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| url = http://palaios.sepmonline.org/cgi/content/abstract/18/4-5/454 |
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| doi = 10.2307/3515363 |
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| accessdate = 2007-04-24 |
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| jstor = 3515363 |
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}}</ref> The boreholes are distributed along the tube length, mostly not at the top. This may indicate that the animal could retract itself down the tube in response to predation. |
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| bibcode = 1999Palai..14...86S }}</ref> Because of its small size, ''Cloudina'' would be expected to be found ''in situ'' in the microbial mat, especially if, as Seilacher suggests, sedimentation built up around it during its lifetime. But all the many specimens discovered to date have only been found having been washed out of their places of growth. A further argument against Seilacher's hypothesis is that the predatory borings found in many specimens are not concentrated at what would be the top end, as one would expect if the animal was mainly buried. An alternative is that the organism dwelt on seaweeds,<ref name=Miller>{{Cite web |
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Interestingly, the very similar co-occuring shelly fossil ''[[Sinotubulites]]'' was not affected by borings. This evidence of predator-prey specificity shows the possibility of speciation in response to predation, a potential cause of the [[Cambrian explosion|rapid diversification event during the Cambrian]]. |
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| author = Miller, A.J. |
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| year = 2004 |
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| title = A Revised Morphology of Cloudina with Ecological and Phylogenetic Implications |
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| url = http://ajm.pioneeringprojects.org/files/CloudinaPaper_Final.pdf |
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| access-date = 2007-04-24 |
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}}</ref> but until a specimen unquestionably ''in situ'' is discovered, its mode of life remains open to debate. |
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The tubes often appear to form colonies, although they are sometimes found in more isolated situations. The frequent appearance of large and sometimes single-species colonies has been attributed to the lack of significant predation.<ref name=Description /> On the other hand, in some locations up to 20% of ''Cloudina'' fossils contain [[predator]]y borings ranging from 15 to 400 μm in diameter.<ref name="HUA2003">{{Cite journal|author=Hua, H.|author2=Pratt, B.R.|author3=Zhang, L.U.Y.I.|year=2003|title=Borings in Cloudina Shells: Complex Predator-Prey Dynamics in the Terminal Neoproterozoic|journal=PALAIOS|volume=18|issue=4–5|pages=454|bibcode=2003Palai..18..454H|doi=10.1669/0883-1351(2003)018<0454:BICSCP>2.0.CO;2|s2cid=131590949 |issn=0883-1351}}<!--| access-date = 2007-04-24--></ref><ref name=Bengtson1992 /> The boreholes are rather evenly distributed along the tube length, and some tubes had been bored multiple times—hence the organism could survive attacks, since predators do not attack empty shells. This may indicate that the animal could vary its position in the tube in response to predation, or that it occupied the full length—but not the full width—of the tube. The even distribution is perhaps difficult to reconcile with an [[infauna]]l lifestyle, mainly buried in a microbial mat, and adds weight to Miller's suggestion that the animal lived on seaweeds or in a reef environment. If modern-day molluscs are a suitable analogy, the size distribution of the borings suggests that the predator was similar in size to ''Cloudina''.<ref name="Brain2001">{{cite journal|author=Brain, CK|year=2001|title=Some observations on Cloudina, a terminal Proterozoic index fossil from Namibia|journal=Journal of African Earth Sciences|volume=33|issue=3|pages=475–480|bibcode=2001JAfES..33..475B|doi=10.1016/S0899-5362(01)00083-5}}<!--| access-date = 2007-04-24--></ref> |
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Fossil findings in the [[Nama Group]], [[Namibia]], suggest that ''Cloudina'' was one of the first reef-building animals,<ref name="natnews2014">{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1038/nature.2014.15470| title = Earliest skeletal animals were reef builders| journal = Nature| year = 2014| last1 = Morrison | first1 = J. | s2cid = 130499063}}</ref><ref name="penny2014">{{cite journal | doi = 10.1126/science.1253393 | pmid=24970084 | title=Ediacaran metazoan reefs from the Nama Group, Namibia | journal=Science | date=2014 | volume=344 | issue=6191 | pages=1504–1506 | first=A. M. | last=Penny|bibcode = 2014Sci...344.1504P | url=https://www.pure.ed.ac.uk/ws/files/16689099/Ediacaran_metazoan_reefs_Revised_1_.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221010/https://www.pure.ed.ac.uk/ws/files/16689099/Ediacaran_metazoan_reefs_Revised_1_.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-10 |url-status=live | hdl=20.500.11820/44c8eba4-ec59-46d8-b868-b98c8ef1a113 | s2cid=206556938 | hdl-access=free }}</ref> but machine-learning facilitated 3D tomography indicates that the 'reef-forming' fossils are in fact simply aggregations of solitary individuals.<ref>{{Cite journal | title=Multiscale approach reveals that Cloudina aggregates are detritus and not in situ reef constructions| journal=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences| volume=115| issue=11| pages=E2519–E2527| date=2018-02-22| doi=10.1073/pnas.1719911115| pmid=29483244| pmc=5856547| last1=Mehra| first1=Akshay| last2=Maloof| first2=Adam| bibcode=2018PNAS..115E2519M| doi-access=free}}</ref> |
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==Fossil locations== |
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''Cloudina'' occurred in [[calcium carbonate]] rich areas of [[stromatolite]] reefs. It is found in association with ''[[Namacalathus]]'', which like ''Cloudina'' was "weakly skeletal" and solitary, and ''[[Namapoikia]]'', which was "robustly skeletal" and formed sheets on open surfaces.<ref>[http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2005AM/finalprogram/abstract_90560.htm Neoproterozoic Microbial-Metazoan Reefs, Nama Region, Namibia] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160307034553/http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2005AM/finalprogram/abstract_90560.htm |date=2016-03-07 }} - abstract retrieved January 13, 2007</ref> |
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First found in the [[Nama Group]] in [[Namibia]],<ref name=Description /> ''Cloudina'' has also been reported in [[Oman]],<ref name=Conway1990>{{cite journal| author = Conway Morris, S.|author2=Mattes, B.W.|author3=Chen, M.| year = 1990| title = The early skeletal organism Cloudina: new occurrences from Oman and possibly China| journal = American Journal of Science| volume = 290| pages = 245–260}}</ref> [[China]]'s [[Dengying Formation]],<ref name=Conway1990 /><ref name=Bengtson1992>{{cite journal| author = Bengtson, S.|author2=Zhao, Y.| date = 1992-07-17| title = Predatorial Borings in Late Precambrian Mineralized Exoskeletons| journal = Science| volume = 257| issue = 5068| pages = 367–9| doi = 10.1126/science.257.5068.367| pmid = 17832833|bibcode = 1992Sci...257..367B |s2cid=6710335}}</ref> [[Canada]],<ref name=Hofmann2001>{{cite journal |
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| author = Hofmann, H.J. |
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|author2=Mountjoy, E.W. |
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| date = 2001-12-01 |
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| title = Namacalathus-Cloudina assemblage in Neoproterozoic Miette Group (Byng Formation), British Columbia: Canada's oldest shelly fossils |
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| journal = Geology |
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| volume = 29 |
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| issue = 12 |
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| pages = 1091–1094 |
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| doi = 10.1130/0091-7613(2001)029<1091:NCAINM>2.0.CO;2 |
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| issn = 0091-7613 |
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|bibcode = 2001Geo....29.1091H |
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}}</ref> [[Uruguay]],<ref name=Gaucher1998>{{cite journal |
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| author = Gaucher, C. |
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|author2=Sprechmann, P. |
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| year = 1998 |
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| title = Grupo Arroyo del Soldado: paleontologia, edad y correlaciones (Vendiano-Cámbrico Inferior, Uruguay) |
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| journal = Actas II Congreso Uruguaya de Geologia, Montevideo, Sociedad Uruguaya de Geologia — Facultad de Ciencias |
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| pages = 183–187 |
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| language=es |
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}}</ref><ref name=Gaucher2000>{{cite book |
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| author = Gaucher, C. |
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| year = 2000 |
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| title = Sedimentology, palaeontology, and stratigraphy of the Arroyo del Soldado Group (Vendian to Cambrian, Uruguay) |
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}}</ref> [[Argentina]],<ref>by Yochelson and Herrera, 1974; they could have mistaken them for ''Salterella''. See Grant 1990 for reference and discussion.</ref> [[Antarctica]],<ref name="Yochelson1977">{{cite journal|author=Yochelson, E.L.|author2=Stump, E.|year=1977|title=Discovery of Early Cambrian Fossils at Taylor Nunatak, Antarctica|journal=[[Journal of Paleontology]]|volume=51|issue=4|pages=872–875|issn=0022-3360|jstor=1303753}}<!--| access-date = 2007-05-18--></ref> [[Brazil]],<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Oliveira |first=Rick Souza de |last2=Nogueira |first2=Afonso César Rodrigues |last3=Romero |first3=Guilherme Raffaeli |last4=Truckenbrodt |first4=Werner |last5=da Silva Bandeira |first5=José Cavalcante |date=December 2019 |title=Ediacaran ramp depositional model of the Tamengo Formation, Brazil |url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0895981119300197 |journal=[[Journal of South American Earth Sciences]] |language=en |volume=96 |pages=102348 |doi=10.1016/j.jsames.2019.102348 |access-date=7 July 2024 |via=Elsevier Science Direct}}</ref><ref name=Zaine1985>{{cite journal |
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| author = Zaine, M.F. |
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|author2=Fairchild, T.R. |
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| year = 1985 |
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| title = Comparison of Aulophycus lucianoi Beurlen & Sommer from Ladario (MS) and the genus Cloudina Germs, Ediacaran of Namibia |
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| journal = Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências |
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| volume = 57 |
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| pages = 130 |
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}}</ref> [[Nevada]],<ref name=HAGADORN2000>{{Cite journal |
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| author = Hagadorn, J.W. |
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|author2=Waggoner, B. |
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| year = 2000 |
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| title = Ediacaran fossils from the southwestern Great Basin, United States |
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| url = http://jpaleontol.geoscienceworld.org/cgi/content/abstract/74/2/349 |
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| journal = [[Journal of Paleontology]] |
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| doi = 10.1666/0022-3360(2000)074<0349:EFFTSG>2.0.CO;2 |
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| volume = 74 |
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| pages = 349 |
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| issn = 0022-3360 |
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| issue = 2 |
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|s2cid=130774342 |
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}}</ref> central [[Spain]], northwest [[Mexico]] and [[California]],<ref name=Grant1990 /> |
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in west and south [[Siberia]]. The ''Cloudina'' fossils found in association with late Precambrian-Early Cambrian [[Anabarites|anabaritids]] SSF and tubular agglutinated skeletal fossils ''[[Platysolenites]]'' and ''[[Spirosolenites]]'' in Siberia.<ref name='Kontorovich2008'>{{cite journal |
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| title = A section of Vendian in the east of West Siberian Plate (based on data from the Borehole Vostok 3) |
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| year = 2008 |
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| journal = Russian Geology and Geophysics |
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| volume = 49 |
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| pages = 932 |
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| doi = 10.1016/j.rgg.2008.06.012 |
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| last1 = Kontorovich |
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| first1 = A. |
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| last2 = Varlamov |
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| first2 = A. |
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| last3 = Grazhdankin |
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| first3 = D. |
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| last4 = Karlova |
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| first4 = G. |
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| last5 = Klets |
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| first5 = A. |
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| last6 = Kontorovich |
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| first6 = V. |
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| last7 = Saraev |
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| first7 = S. |
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| last8 = Terleev |
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| first8 = A. |
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| last9 = Belyaev |
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| first9 = S. |
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| display-authors= 8 |
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| issue = 12 |
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| bibcode = 2008RuGG...49..932K |
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}}</ref><ref name="Zhuravlev 2009">{{cite journal|author=Andrey Yu. Zhuravlev |author2=Jose Antonio Gamez Vintaned |author3=Andrey Yu. Ivantsov |date=September 2009|title=First finds of problematic Ediacaran fossil ''Gaojiashania'' in Siberia and its origin|journal=Geological Magazine|volume=146|issue=5|pages=775–780| url=http://geolmag.geoscienceworld.org/cgi/content/abstract/146/5/775 | doi=10.1017/S0016756809990185|bibcode=2009GeoM..146..775Z|s2cid=140569611 }}</ref> |
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<!-- ********* duplicated |
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and although it is never in the same bed as "Vendozoan-type" (soft-bodied) [[Ediacaran biota|Ediacaran fossils]], it is sometimes interbedded with them, suggesting that the two classes of fossil may have occupied different habitats in close proximity. |
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********** --><!-- |
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--><!-- Unreferenced ********** |
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This co-existence stands against [[Mark McMenamin]]'s hypothesis that the advent of skeletonisation caused the extinction of soft-bodied Ediacaran forms; however the disappearance of ''Cloudina'' at the [[Ediacaran]] - Cambrian boundary suggests that an [[extinction event]] may have occurred, which may have been related to the subsequent [[Cambrian explosion]] of life-forms. Although no Cloudinid body fossils have been found after the Ediacaran period, it has been suggested that the enigmatic trace fossils ''[[Salterella]]'' and ''[[Cornulites]]'' were formed by Cloudinids. ********* --> |
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==Paleontological importance== |
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==Localities== |
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Although not the first [[Small shelly fossils|small shelly fossil]] to be found, ''Cloudina'' is one of the earliest and most abundant.<ref name="Bengtson2004">{{cite book |contribution=Early skeletal fossils |author=Bengtson, S. |editor1=Lipps, J.H. |editor2=Waggoner, B.M. |title=Neoproterozoic – Cambrian Biological Revolutions |year=2004 |series=Paleontological Society Papers |volume=10 |pages=67–78 |url=http://www.nrm.se/download/18.4e32c81078a8d9249800021554/Bengtson2004ESF.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221010/http://www.nrm.se/download/18.4e32c81078a8d9249800021554/Bengtson2004ESF.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-10 |url-status=live |access-date=2008-07-18 |df=dmy-all |doi=10.1017/S1089332600002345}}</ref> The evolution of external shells in the Late [[Ediacaran]] is thought to be a defence against predators, marking the start of an evolutionary arms race.<ref name="Bengtson2004"/><ref name="Dzik2007VerdunSyndrome">{{cite journal |author=Dzik, J. |title=The Verdun Syndrome: Simultaneous origin of protective armour and infaunal shelters at the Precambrian–Cambrian Transition |journal=Geological Society, London, Special Publications |year=2007 |volume=286 |issue=1 |pages=405–414 |url=http://www.paleo.pan.pl/people/Dzik/Publications/Verdun.pdf |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221010/http://www.paleo.pan.pl/people/Dzik/Publications/Verdun.pdf |archive-date=2022-10-10 |url-status=live |access-date=2008-07-30 |df=dmy-all |doi=10.1144/SP286.30 |bibcode=2007GSLSP.286..405D |citeseerx=10.1.1.693.9187|s2cid=33112819 }}</ref> While predatory borings are common in ''Cloudina'' specimens, no such borings have been found in ''[[Sinotubulites]]'', a similar shelly fossil sometimes found in the same beds. In addition, the diameters of borings in ''Cloudina'' are proportional to the sizes of specimens, which suggests that predators were selective about the size of their prey. These two indications that predators attacked selectively suggest the possibility of [[speciation]] in response to predation, which is often postulated as a potential cause of the [[Cambrian explosion|rapid diversification of animals in the Early Cambrian]].<ref name=Bengtson1992/> |
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<!-- ******************* |
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Can't find ref for idea that interleaving casts doubt on McMenamin that the advent of skeletonization caused the extinction of soft-bodied Ediacaran forms |
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******************* |
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The fact that beds containing ''Cloudina'' and other shelly fossils interleave with beds containing soft-bodied [[Ediacara biota]] casts doubt on [[Mark McMenamin | McMenamin]]'s hypothesis that the advent of skeletonization caused the extinction of soft-bodied Ediacaran forms.<ref name="McMenamin1986">{{cite book |author=McMenamin M. |year=1986 |title=The Garden of Ediacara |isbn=978-0-231-10559-0 |access-date=2007-03-08 |df=dmy-all |publisher=Columbia Univ. Press |location=New York, NY}}</ref> However there is evidence of an end-Ediacaran [[mass extinction|extinction event]], which may account for the disappearance of both ''Cloudina'' and most of the Ediacara biota, and which may have been related to the subsequent [[Cambrian explosion]] of life-forms.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Decoding the Ediacaran Enigma |author1=Brasier, M. |author2=Antcliffe, J. |journal=Science |date=20 August 2004 |volume=305 |issue=5687 |doi=10.1126/science.1102673 |url=http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/305/5687/1115?ck=nck |access-date=2008-07-18 |df=dmy-all |pages=1115–7 |pmid=15326344}}</ref> |
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******************* --> |
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==See also== |
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First found in the Nama Formation in Namibia,<ref name=Description /> ''Cloudina'' has also been observed in Oman, China's Dengying Formation,<ref name=Conway1990>{{cite journal |
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* ''[[Anabarites]]'' |
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| author = Conway Morris, S. |
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* ''[[Corumbella]]'' |
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| coauthors = Mattes, BW, Chen, M. |
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* ''[[Saarina]]'' |
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| year = 1990 |
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* ''[[Sinotubulites]]'' |
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| title = The early skeletal organism Cloudina: new occurrences from Oman and possibly China |
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* ''[[Somatohelix]]'' |
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| journal = American Journal of Science |
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* [[List of Ediacaran genera]] |
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| volume = 290 |
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| pages = 245-260 |
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| issn = |
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| doi = |
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| url = |
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| accessdate = 2007-04-24 |
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}}</ref> Canada, Nevada and Brazil. |
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==References and footnotes== |
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*[http://geology.geoscienceworld.org/cgi/content/abstract/33/4/277 Skeletogenesis and asexual reproduction Hong Hua et al] |
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*[http://ajm.pioneeringprojects.org/files/CloudinaPaper_Final.pdf Morphology of Cloudina by Andrew Miller] |
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<references/> |
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==References== |
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[[Category:Fossils]] |
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{{Reflist|25em}} |
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[[Category:Ediacaran biota]] |
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{{Taxonbar|from=Q509074}} |
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{{good article}} |
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[[Category:Prehistoric marine animals]] |
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{{invertebrate-stub}} |
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[[Category:Ediacaran life]] |
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[[Category:Taxa described in 1985]] |
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[[Category:Prehistoric animal families]] |
Latest revision as of 16:55, 28 October 2024
Cloudinidae Temporal range:
| |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | incertae sedis |
Family: | †Cloudinidae Hahn and Pflug, 1985 |
Species | |
| |
Synonyms | |
|
The cloudinids, an early metazoan family containing the genera Acuticocloudina, Cloudina and Conotubus, lived in the late Ediacaran period about 550 million years ago.[2][3] and became extinct at the base of the Cambrian.[1] They formed millimetre-scale conical fossils consisting of calcareous cones nested within one another; the appearance of the organism itself remains unknown. The name Cloudina honors the 20th-century geologist and paleontologist Preston Cloud.[4]
Cloudinids comprise two genera: Cloudina itself is mineralized, whereas Conotubus is at best weakly mineralized, whilst sharing the same "funnel-in-funnel" construction.[5]
Cloudinids had a wide geographic range, reflected in the present distribution of localities in which their fossils are found, and are an abundant component of some deposits. They never appear in the same layers as soft-bodied Ediacaran biota, but the fact that some sequences contain cloudinids and Ediacaran biota in alternating layers suggests that these groups had different environmental preferences. It has been suggested that cloudinids lived embedded in microbial mats, growing new cones to avoid being buried by silt. However no specimens have been found embedded in mats, and their mode of life is still an unresolved question.
The classification of the cloudinids has proved difficult: they were initially regarded as polychaete worms, and then as coral-like cnidarians on the basis of what look like buds on some specimens. Current scientific opinion is divided between classifying them as polychaetes and regarding it as unsafe to classify them as members of any broader grouping. In 2020, a new study of pyritized specimens from the Wood Canyon Formation in Nevada showed the presence of Nephrozoan type guts, the oldest on record, supporting the bilaterian interpretation.[3]
Cloudinids are important in the history of animal evolution for two reasons. They are among the earliest and most abundant of the small shelly fossils with mineralized skeletons, and therefore feature in the debate about why such skeletons first appeared in the Late Ediacaran. The most widely supported answer is that their shells are a defense against predators, as some Cloudina specimens from China bear the marks of multiple attacks, which suggests they survived at least a few of them. The holes made by predators are approximately proportional to the size of the Cloudina specimens, and Sinotubulites fossils, which are often found in the same beds, have so far shown no such holes. These two points suggest that predators attacked in a selective manner, and the evolutionary arms race which this indicates is commonly cited as a cause of the Cambrian explosion of animal diversity and complexity.
Morphology
[edit]Cloudina varies in size from a diameter of 0.3 to 6.5 mm, and 8 to 150 mm in length.[4] Fossils consist of a series of stacked vase-like calcite tubes, whose original mineral composition is unknown,[6] but inferred to be high-magnesium calcite.[7] Each cone traps a significant pore space beneath it, and stacks eccentrically in the one below. This results in a ridged external appearance. The overall tube is curved or sinuous, and occasionally branches. The tube walls are 8 to 50 micrometers thick, usually lying in the range 10 to 25 μm.[8] Although it used to be thought that the tubes had test-tube like bases,[4] detailed three-dimensional reconstruction has shown that the tubes had an open base.[9] There is evidence that the tube was flexible.[10]
Classification
[edit]Cloudina was originally classified in 1972 as a member of the Cribricyathea, a class known from the Early Cambrian.[4] Glaessner (1976) accepted this classification and also proposed that Cloudina was similar to the annelid worms, particularly serpulid polychaetes.[11] However, Hahn & Pflug (1985) and Conway Morris et al.. (1990) doubted both Germs' and Glaessner's suggested relationships, and were unwilling to classify it to anything more than its own family, Cloudinidae.[12][13] Some specimens of Cloudina hartmannae display budding,[4] which implies asexual reproduction.[14] On this basis Grant (1990) classified Cloudina as a coral-like cnidarian.[8] Since the tubes had an open base, creating a single living space rather than a series of separate chambers, Cloudina is more likely to be a stem group polychaete worm,[9] in other words an evolutionary "aunt" or "cousin" of more recent polychaetes. This interpretation is reinforced by the even distribution of bore-holes made by predators.[15][16] However, as with so many Ediacaran life forms, there is great debate surrounding its position in the tree of life, and classification between the kingdom and family level may be unwise.[8][13][17]
Ecology
[edit]Cloudina is frequently found in association with stromatolites, which are limited to shallow water; their isotopic composition[18] suggests that water temperatures were relatively cool. They have also been found in normal sea-floor sediments, suggesting that they were not only restricted to dwelling on microbial mounds.[19] On the other hand, Cloudina has never been found in the same layers as the soft-bodied Ediacara biota, but Cloudina and Ediacara biota have been found in alternating layers. This suggests that the two groups of organisms had different environmental preferences.[9]
In many Cloudina specimens the ridges formed by the cones are of varying width, which suggests the organisms grew at a variable rate. Adolf Seilacher suggests that they adhered to microbial mats, and that the growth phases represented the organism keeping pace with sedimentation—growing through new material deposited on it that would otherwise bury it. Kinks in the developing tube are easily explained by the mat falling slightly from the horizontal.[20] Because of its small size, Cloudina would be expected to be found in situ in the microbial mat, especially if, as Seilacher suggests, sedimentation built up around it during its lifetime. But all the many specimens discovered to date have only been found having been washed out of their places of growth. A further argument against Seilacher's hypothesis is that the predatory borings found in many specimens are not concentrated at what would be the top end, as one would expect if the animal was mainly buried. An alternative is that the organism dwelt on seaweeds,[9] but until a specimen unquestionably in situ is discovered, its mode of life remains open to debate.
The tubes often appear to form colonies, although they are sometimes found in more isolated situations. The frequent appearance of large and sometimes single-species colonies has been attributed to the lack of significant predation.[4] On the other hand, in some locations up to 20% of Cloudina fossils contain predatory borings ranging from 15 to 400 μm in diameter.[15][16] The boreholes are rather evenly distributed along the tube length, and some tubes had been bored multiple times—hence the organism could survive attacks, since predators do not attack empty shells. This may indicate that the animal could vary its position in the tube in response to predation, or that it occupied the full length—but not the full width—of the tube. The even distribution is perhaps difficult to reconcile with an infaunal lifestyle, mainly buried in a microbial mat, and adds weight to Miller's suggestion that the animal lived on seaweeds or in a reef environment. If modern-day molluscs are a suitable analogy, the size distribution of the borings suggests that the predator was similar in size to Cloudina.[10]
Fossil findings in the Nama Group, Namibia, suggest that Cloudina was one of the first reef-building animals,[21][22] but machine-learning facilitated 3D tomography indicates that the 'reef-forming' fossils are in fact simply aggregations of solitary individuals.[23]
Fossil locations
[edit]Cloudina occurred in calcium carbonate rich areas of stromatolite reefs. It is found in association with Namacalathus, which like Cloudina was "weakly skeletal" and solitary, and Namapoikia, which was "robustly skeletal" and formed sheets on open surfaces.[24]
First found in the Nama Group in Namibia,[4] Cloudina has also been reported in Oman,[13] China's Dengying Formation,[13][16] Canada,[25] Uruguay,[26][27] Argentina,[28] Antarctica,[29] Brazil,[30][31] Nevada,[32] central Spain, northwest Mexico and California,[8] in west and south Siberia. The Cloudina fossils found in association with late Precambrian-Early Cambrian anabaritids SSF and tubular agglutinated skeletal fossils Platysolenites and Spirosolenites in Siberia.[33][34]
Paleontological importance
[edit]Although not the first small shelly fossil to be found, Cloudina is one of the earliest and most abundant.[35] The evolution of external shells in the Late Ediacaran is thought to be a defence against predators, marking the start of an evolutionary arms race.[35][36] While predatory borings are common in Cloudina specimens, no such borings have been found in Sinotubulites, a similar shelly fossil sometimes found in the same beds. In addition, the diameters of borings in Cloudina are proportional to the sizes of specimens, which suggests that predators were selective about the size of their prey. These two indications that predators attacked selectively suggest the possibility of speciation in response to predation, which is often postulated as a potential cause of the rapid diversification of animals in the Early Cambrian.[16]
See also
[edit]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Yang, Ben; Steiner, Michael; Zhu, Maoyan; Li, Guoxiang; Liu, Jianni; Liu, Pengju (2016). "Transitional Ediacaran–Cambrian small skeletal fossil assemblages from South China and Kazakhstan: Implications for chronostratigraphy and metazoan evolution". Precambrian Research. 285: 202–215. Bibcode:2016PreR..285..202Y. doi:10.1016/j.precamres.2016.09.016.
- ^ Joel, Lucas (10 January 2020). "Fossil Reveals Earth's Oldest Known Animal Guts - The find in a Nevada desert revealed an intestine inside a creature that looks like a worm made of a stack of ice cream cones". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
- ^ a b Schiffbauer, James D.; et al. (10 January 2020). "Discovery of bilaterian-type through-guts in cloudinomorphs from the terminal Ediacaran Period". Nature Communications. 11 (205): 205. Bibcode:2020NatCo..11..205S. doi:10.1038/s41467-019-13882-z. PMC 6954273. PMID 31924764.
- ^ a b c d e f g Germs, G.J.B. (October 1972). "New shelly fossils from Nama Group, South West Africa". American Journal of Science. 272 (8): 752–761. Bibcode:1972AmJS..272..752G. doi:10.2475/ajs.272.8.752.
- ^ Smith, E.F.; Nelson, L.L.; Strange, M.A.; Eyster, A.E.; Rowland, S.M.; Schrag, D.P.; MacDonald, F.A. (2016). "The end of the Ediacaran: Two new exceptionally preserved body fossil assemblages from Mount Dunfee, Nevada, USA". Geology. 44 (11): 911. Bibcode:2016Geo....44..911S. doi:10.1130/G38157.1.
- ^ Porter, S.M. (1 June 2007). "Seawater Chemistry and Early Carbonate Biomineralization". Science. 316 (5829): 1302. Bibcode:2007Sci...316.1302P. doi:10.1126/science.1137284. PMID 17540895. S2CID 27418253.
- ^ 1. Zhuravlev, A.Y., Wood, R.A., and Penny, A.M. (2015). Ediacaran skeletal metazoan interpreted as a lophophorate. Proc. R. Soc. B 282, 20151860. Available at: http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/lookup/doi/10.1098/rspb.2015.1860.
- ^ a b c d Grant, S.W. (1990). "Shell structure and distribution of Cloudina, a potential index fossil for the terminal Proterozoic". American Journal of Science. 290-A (290–A): 261–294. PMID 11538690. Archived from the original on 2011-05-22. Retrieved 2008-07-19.
- ^ a b c d Miller, A.J. (2004). "A Revised Morphology of Cloudina with Ecological and Phylogenetic Implications" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-04-24.
- ^ a b Brain, CK (2001). "Some observations on Cloudina, a terminal Proterozoic index fossil from Namibia". Journal of African Earth Sciences. 33 (3): 475–480. Bibcode:2001JAfES..33..475B. doi:10.1016/S0899-5362(01)00083-5.
- ^ Glaessner, M. F. (1976). "Early Phanerozoic annelid worms and their geological and biological significance". Journal of the Geological Society. 132 (3): 259–275. Bibcode:1976JGSoc.132..259G. doi:10.1144/gsjgs.132.3.0259. S2CID 130795227.
- ^ Hahn, G.; H. D. Pflug (1985). "Die Cloudinidae n. fam., Kalk-Röhren aus dem Vendium und Unter-Kambrium". Senckenbergiana Lethaea. 65: 413–431.
- ^ a b c d Conway Morris, S.; Mattes, B.W.; Chen, M. (1990). "The early skeletal organism Cloudina: new occurrences from Oman and possibly China". American Journal of Science. 290: 245–260.
- ^ Hua, H.; Chen, Z.; Yuan, X.; Zhang, L.; Xiao, S. (2005). "Skeletogenesis and asexual reproduction in the earliest biomineralizing animal Cloudina". Geology. 33 (4): 277–280. Bibcode:2005Geo....33..277H. doi:10.1130/G21198.1.
- ^ a b Hua, H.; Pratt, B.R.; Zhang, L.U.Y.I. (2003). "Borings in Cloudina Shells: Complex Predator-Prey Dynamics in the Terminal Neoproterozoic". PALAIOS. 18 (4–5): 454. Bibcode:2003Palai..18..454H. doi:10.1669/0883-1351(2003)018<0454:BICSCP>2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0883-1351. S2CID 131590949.
- ^ a b c d Bengtson, S.; Zhao, Y. (1992-07-17). "Predatorial Borings in Late Precambrian Mineralized Exoskeletons". Science. 257 (5068): 367–9. Bibcode:1992Sci...257..367B. doi:10.1126/science.257.5068.367. PMID 17832833. S2CID 6710335.
- ^ Vinn, O.; Zatoń, M. (2012). "Inconsistencies in proposed annelid affinities of early biomineralized organism Cloudina (Ediacaran): structural and ontogenetic evidences". Carnets de Géologie. CG2012_A03: 39–47. doi:10.4267/2042/46095.
- ^ Ca/Mg ratios
- ^ Domke, Kirk L.; Bottjer, David J.; Loyd, Sean J.; Corsetti, Frank A.; Lyons, Timothy W. (August 2009). "Providing a Palaeoecological and Geochemical Context for Cloudina in Western North America" (PDF). In Smith, Martin R.; O'Brien, Lorna J.; Caron, Jean-Bernard (eds.). Abstract Volume. International Conference on the Cambrian Explosion (Walcott 2009). Toronto, Ontario, Canada: The Burgess Shale Consortium (published 31 July 2009). ISBN 978-0-9812885-1-2.
- ^ Seilacher, A. (1999). "Biomat-related lifestyles in the Precambrian". PALAIOS. 14 (1): 86–93. Bibcode:1999Palai..14...86S. doi:10.2307/3515363. JSTOR 3515363.
- ^ Morrison, J. (2014). "Earliest skeletal animals were reef builders". Nature. doi:10.1038/nature.2014.15470. S2CID 130499063.
- ^ Penny, A. M. (2014). "Ediacaran metazoan reefs from the Nama Group, Namibia" (PDF). Science. 344 (6191): 1504–1506. Bibcode:2014Sci...344.1504P. doi:10.1126/science.1253393. hdl:20.500.11820/44c8eba4-ec59-46d8-b868-b98c8ef1a113. PMID 24970084. S2CID 206556938. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-10.
- ^ Mehra, Akshay; Maloof, Adam (2018-02-22). "Multiscale approach reveals that Cloudina aggregates are detritus and not in situ reef constructions". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 115 (11): E2519–E2527. Bibcode:2018PNAS..115E2519M. doi:10.1073/pnas.1719911115. PMC 5856547. PMID 29483244.
- ^ Neoproterozoic Microbial-Metazoan Reefs, Nama Region, Namibia Archived 2016-03-07 at the Wayback Machine - abstract retrieved January 13, 2007
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