| Literature DB >> 25472836 |
Duncan Je Murdock1, Sarah E Gabbott2, Georg Mayer3, Mark A Purnell4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fossil lobopodians, including animals proposed to have close affinity to modern onychophorans, are crucial to understanding the evolution of the panarthropod body plan and the phylum-level relationships between the ecdysozoan groups. Unfortunately, the key features of their anatomy are un-mineralized and subject to biases introduced during death, decay and preservation, yet the extent to which these fossils have been affected by the processes of post-mortem decay is entirely untested. Recent experimental work on chordates has highlighted a profound bias caused by decay, resulting in the erroneous interpretation of badly decayed specimens as primitive members of a clade (stemward slippage). The degree to which this bias affects organisms other than chordates is unknown.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25472836 PMCID: PMC4266977 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-014-0222-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Decay stages for the onychophoran
| Stage 1 | Days 0–2 | Onset of breakdown of cuticle and pigment granules, soapy gut, loss of slime gland endpieces |
| Stage 2 | Days 2–8 | Onset of decay of remaining internal organs, advanced breakdown of cuticle and associated effects on limbs, mouth and trunk |
| Stage 3 | Days 8–34 | Total loss of distinct internal organs, onset of decay of all external characters (except jaws, claws and eyes) |
| Stage 4 | Days 34–109 | Total loss of epidermis, eyes become less distinct or lost, onset of pigment loss, head consistently decaying |
| Stage 5 | Days 109–220+ | Onset of loss of external ‘structural’ characters, complete loss of pigment granules, initial rupturing of outer cuticle |
The experimental organisms did not decay completely during the sampled interval. However, based on previous experiments with polychaete worms [2] we predict that eventually only chitinous jaws and claws would remain.
Figure 1Anatomy and decay of Onychophora. (a) Idealized external (lower half) and internal anatomy (upper half) of Onychophora based on that of E. rowelli, with key anatomical characters labelled. Shown immediately post-mortem (upper), at the end of decay stage 2 (centre) and at the end of decay stage four (lower), to illustrate character loss and morphological deformation. (b) Decay sequence through time. Yellow = ‘pristine’; orange = ‘decaying’; red = some ‘lost’; bars terminate at first sampling interval where all are lost. Characters were initially ranked based on the timing of complete loss. Where this resulted in tied ranks, ties were broken based on the time of onset of loss. Remaining ties were broken based on the time at which all samples of a character exhibit decay, then the time of onset of decay. Rankings quoted at the termination of each bar.
Figure 2Changes in overall morphology of during decay. Change (%) is calculated as original length minus decayed length, divided by original length. Dotted lines join mean values; solid lines show linear regressions. (a) Change in the body length; R2 = 0.021, F = 0.881, df = 1,39, p = 0.354. (b) Change in body width; measurements were taken between the 7th and 8th limb pair, across the outer cuticle (open circles) and detached epidermis (solid); outer R2 = 0.392, F = 27.777, df = 1,43, p <0.0001; inner R2 = 0.122, F = 4.304, df = 1,31, p = 0.046. (c) Change in limb length (seventh pair); measurements were taken from base of the terminal pad to the junction between limb and trunk; R2 = 0.148, F = 4.003, df = 1,23, p = 0.057. (d) Change in the limb width (seventh pair); measurements were taken at the widest point of the limb, across the outer cuticle (open circles) and detached epidermis (solid); outer R2 = 0.003, F =0.131, df = 1,40, p = 0.719; inner R2 = 0.181, F = 5.966, df = 1,27, p = 0.021. F tests are for significance of slope of regression.
Figure 3Decay trajectory of characters grouped by body region. States of character decay coded as: 0 = pristine, 1 = onset of decay, 2 = complete decay, 3 = onset of loss, 4 = complete loss. Jaws and terminal claws are not shown, as they are pristine throughout the experiment. Lines are linear regressions.