Hallucigenia
Hallucigenia Temporal range:
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Artist's rendering of Hallucigenia according to the modern interpretation | |
Fossil of Hallucigenia from the Burgess shale | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
(unranked): | Panarthropoda |
Phylum: | †"Lobopodia" |
Family: | †Hallucigeniidae |
Genus: | †Hallucigenia Conway Morris, 1977[1] |
Species | |
Synonyms | |
Canadia sparsa |
Hallucigenia is a genus of Cambrian animals known from articulated fossils in Burgess Shale-type deposits in Canada and China, and from isolated spines around the world. Its quirky name reflects its unusual appearance and eccentric history of study; when it was erected as a genus, the animal was reconstructed upside down and back to front. Hallucigenia is now recognized as a "lobopodian worm". It is considered by some to represent an early ancestor of the living velvet worms, although other researchers favour a relationship closer to arthropods.
Description
Hallucigenia is a 0.5—3.5 cm long tubular organism with seven or eight pairs of slender legs, each terminating with a pair of claws. Above each leg is a rigid conical spine. The 'head' and 'tail' end of the organism are difficult to identify; one end extends some distance beyond the legs and often droops down as if to reach the floor. Although some specimens display traces of a gut, the internal anatomy has not been formally described. Recent research suggest the extended element is an elongated head with two simple eyes, a mouth with radial teeth, and pharyngeal teeth within the front of the gut.[3]
Hallucigenia's spines are made up of one to four nested elements. Their surface is covered in an ornament of minute triangular 'scales'.[4]
History of study
Hallucigenia was originally described by Walcott as a species of the polychaete worm Canadia. In his 1977 redescription of the organism, Simon Conway Morris recognized the animal as something quite distinct, establishing the new genus. No specimen was available that showed both rows of legs, and as such Conway Morris reconstructed the animal walking on its spines, with its single row of legs interpreted as tentacles on the animal's back. A dark stain at one end of the animal was interpreted as a featureless head. Only the forward tentacles could easily reach to the 'head', meaning that a mouth on the head would have to be fed by passing food along the line of tentacles. Conway Morris suggested that a hollow tube within each of the tentacles might be a mouth. This raised questions such as how it would walk on the stiff legs, but it was accepted as the best available interpretation.[5]
An alternative interpretation considered Hallucigenia to be an appendage of a larger, unknown animal. There had been precedent for this, as the species Anomalocaris had been originally identified as three separate creatures before being identified as a single huge (for its time) 3-foot-long (0.91 m) creature.[5] Given the uncertainty of its taxonomy, Hallucigenia was tentatively placed within the phylum Lobopodia, a catch-all clade containing numerous odd "worms with legs."
In 1991, Lars Ramskold and Hou Xianguang, working with additional specimens of a "hallucigenid," Microdictyon, from the lower Cambrian Maotianshan shales of China, reinterpreted Hallucigenia as an Onychophoran (velvet worm). They inverted it, interpreting the tentacles, which they believe to be paired, as walking structures and the spines as protective. Further preparation of fossil specimens showed that the 'second legs' were buried at an angle to the plane along which the rock had split, and could be revealed by removing the overlying sediment.[6] Ramskold and Hou also believe that the blob-like 'head' is actually a stain that appears in many specimens, not a preserved portion of the anatomy.[7] This stain may be an artefact of decomposition.[8]
Affinity
Hallucigenia has a similar body form to the onychophorans, with the prominent exception of its spines. These spines may provide evidence for a link to Onychophora: the only other biological feature known to exhibit a similar nested construction is the claws of velvet worms.[4][9] However, these spines have previously been interpreted as a unique innovation of the armoured lobopodians,[10] and their equivalence with onychophoran claws has yet to be conclusively demonstrated. As with many Cambrian lobopodians, there is a shortage of clear characters, and a relationship with either arthropods or onychophorans - or both - is conceivable.[10][11] Indeed, some researchers have gone so far as to discount an onychophoran affinity, calling attention to the absence of any clear homologies, and prefer a position closer to the arthropods.[12] However, hallucigenia also lacks many key qualities of arthropods, including a hard exoskeleton, jointed legs and a segmented body.[13]
Diversity
In 2002, Desmond Collins informally suggested that new Hallucigenia fossils from the Burgess Shale showed male and female forms, one with "a rigid trunk, robust neck and a globular head" and the other thinner, and with a small head.[14]
Further species are represented from the Chengjiang.[2]
Distribution
Hallucigenia was first described from the Burgess Shale in southwestern British Columbia, Canada. Template:Gpb abundance Hallucigenia also forms a minor component of Chinese lagerstätten. Isolated hallucigeniid spines, however, are widely distributed in a range of Cambrian deposits, preserved both as carbonaceous and mineralized fossils.[4]
References
- ^ Conway Morris, S. (1977). "A new metazoan from the Cambrian Burgess Shale of British Columbia" (PDF). Palaeontology. 20. 623–640.
- ^ a b Steiner, M.; Hu, S.; Liu, J.; Keupp, H. (2012). "A new species of Hallucigenia from the Cambrian Stage 4 Wulongqing Formation of Yunnan (South China) and the structure of sclerites in lobopodians". Bulletin of Geosciences. 87: 107–124. doi:10.3140/bull.geosci.1280.
- ^ http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature14573.html
- ^ a b c Caron, Jean-Bernard; Smith, Martin R.; Harvey, Thomas H. P. (September 2013). "Beyond the Burgess Shale: Cambrian microfossils track the rise and fall of hallucigeniid lobopodians". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 280 (1767): 20131613. doi:10.1098/rspb.2013.1613. PMID 23902914.
- ^ a b Gould, Stephen Jay (1989). Wonderful life: the Burgess Shale and the nature of history. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-02705-8.[page needed]
- ^ Ramsköld, Lars (April 1992). "The second leg row of Hallucigenia discovered". Lethaia. 25 (2): 221–4. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1992.tb01389.x.
- ^ Ramsköld, L.; Hou, X.-G. (1991). "New early Cambrian animal and onychophoran affinities of enigmatic metazoans". Nature. 351 (6323): 225–8. Bibcode:1991Natur.351..225R. doi:10.1038/351225a0.
- ^ http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nature14573.html
- ^ Science, voo. 345, p. 856.
- ^ a b Budd, Graham E. (2001). "Tardigrades as 'Stem-Group Arthropods': The Evidence from the Cambrian Fauna". Zoologischer Anzeiger. 240 (3–4): 265–79. doi:10.1078/0044-5231-00034.
- ^ Liu, Jianni; Dunlop, Jason A. (15 March 2014). "Cambrian lobopodians: A review of recent progress in our understanding of their morphology and evolution". Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology. 398: 4–15. doi:10.1016/j.palaeo.2013.06.008.
- ^ Budd, Graham E. (March 1996). "The morphology of Opabinia regalis and the reconstruction of the arthropod stem-group". Lethaia. 29 (1): 1–14. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1996.tb01831.x.
- ^ Understanding Evolution (2014). "Hallucigenia: A mysterious onychophoran?". University of California Museum of Paleontology. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
- ^ Collins, Desmond (2002). "Hallucigenia unveiled. Abstracts, Palaeontological Association, 46th annual meeting" (PDF). Palaeontology Newsletter. 51: 85–6.
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Further reading
- Smith, Martin R.; Ortega-Hernández, Javier (2014). "Hallucigenia's onychophoran-like claws and the case for Tactopoda". Nature. 514 (7522): 363. doi:10.1038/nature13576. PMID 25132546.
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