棘皮动物
生物群
劳伦蒂娅
古生物学
冈瓦纳大陆
地质学
古生代
痕迹化石
中国
生态学
生物
地理
考古
构造盆地
作者
Jun Zhao,Imran A. Rahman,Samuel Zamora,Ailin Chen,Peiyun Cong
摘要
Abstract Until now, the earliest fossil echinoderms have been predominantly known from the early Cambrian of Laurentia and West Gondwana. Here, we describe Sprinkleoglobus extenuatus gen. et sp. nov. from the Chengjiang biota (Cambrian Series 2, Stage 3) of Yunnan Province, China. The overall profile of the theca and the morphology of the ambulacra clearly establish it as an edrioasteroid echinoderm. This represents the first discovery of an unequivocal echinoderm from the early part of the Cambrian of South China and is among the oldest records of echinoderms globally. Our material shows that edrioasteroids were diverse and widely distributed from their first occurrence in the fossil record, suggesting an earlier origin for the group. We infer that Sprinkleoglobus and other early echinoderms were adapted for attaching to hard substrates, implying that the so‐called Cambrian substrate revolution was not a strong control on the early evolution of attachment in echinoderms.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI