Sujet : Mosura fentoni
De : eastside.erik (at) *nospam* gmail.com (erik simpson)
Groupes : sci.bio.paleontologyDate : 14. May 2025, 16:35:36
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
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Early evolvability in arthropod tagmosis exemplified by a new radiodont from the Burgess Shale
Abstract
Much diversity in arthropod form is the result of variation in the number and differentiation of segments (tagmosis). Fossil evidence to date has suggested that the earliest-diverging arthropods, the radiodonts, exhibited comparatively limited variability in tagmosis. We present a new radiodont, Mosura fentoni n. gen. and n. sp., from the Cambrian (Wuliuan) Burgess Shale that departs from this pattern. Mosura exhibits up to 26 trunk segments, the highest number reported for any radiodont, despite being among the smallest known. The head is short, with a small, rounded preocular sclerite, three prominent eyes and appendages with curving endites tipped with paired spines, altogether suggesting a nektonic, macrophagous predatory ecology. The trunk is divided into a neck, mesotrunk with large swimming flaps and multisegmented posterotrunk with tightly spaced bands of gill lamellae and reduced flaps. Detailed preservation of expansive circulatory lacunae, closely associated with the gills, clarifies the nature of similar structures in other Cambrian arthropod fossils, including Opabinia. The morphology of the posterotrunk suggests specialization for respiration, unique among radiodonts, but broadly convergent with the xiphosuran opisthosoma, isopod pleon and hexapod abdomen. This reinforces the hypothesis that multiple arthropod lineages underwent parallel diversification in tagmosis, in tandem with their initial Cambrian radiation.
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.242122Cambrian fans are already familiar with such radiodonts as Anomalocaris and Yorgia, but this beast is a little guy, only the sice on a human index finger, unlike the meter-long Anomalodcartis.