| Literature DB >> 26317040 |
Andrzej Balinski1, Yuanlin Sun2.
Abstract
Our perception of biodiversity in the geological past is incomplete and biased because most organisms did not have mineralized skeletons and therefore had little chance of fossilization. This especially refers to shallow-water marine environments, rarely represented by localities with exceptional preservation of fossil material (known as taphonomic windows or Konservat-Lagerstätten). Such extraordinary "windows" may markedly broaden our knowledge of biodiversity of the past. Here, we show a review of the invertebrate fossils from recently discovered locality in the Lower Ordovician Fenxiang Formation of Hubei Province in southern China revealing exceptional preservation of soft tissues. The fauna, generally of shallow-water aspect, contains linguloid brachiopods with a remarkably preserved pedicle, the oldest traces of nematode life activities, the oldest reliable record of hydroids, the first fossil antipatharian corals, a pyritized colonial organism of unknown affinity, supposed arthropod appendages, probable phosphatized scalidophoran worm embryo and other fossils. Our discovery supports the opinion that the famous soft-bodied preservation of Burgess Shale- or Chengjiang-type did not vanish from the fossil record in post-Cambrian times. The new finding represents a prelude to the Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event and provides evidence for calibration of molecular clock of several invertebrate lineages.Entities:
Keywords: Antipatharia; Brachiopoda; Embryos; Hydrozoa; Nematoda; Problematica
Year: 2015 PMID: 26317040 PMCID: PMC4544546 DOI: 10.1007/s11434-015-0762-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Bull (Beijing) ISSN: 2095-9273 Impact factor: 11.780
Fig. 1Occurrence of the most important soft-bodied faunas on the background of the family-level diversity of marine animals through the Phanerozoic with three great Evolutionary Faunas denoted; CEF: Cambrian EF, PEF: Paleozoic EF, MEF: Modern EF, modified after Sepkoski [40]. Other abbreviations: So, Soom Shale; Ma, Manitoba; Be, Beecher’s Trilobite Beds; Ll, Llanfawr Mudstone (more explanation in the text)
Fig. 2Simplified locality map of the exceptionally preserved Early Ordovician fossil fauna (a) and rock column of the Fenxiang Formation, (b) near Tianjialing, Hubei Province
Fig. 3Exceptionally preserved Early Ordovician fauna from the Fenxiang (a–o, q–t) and Dawan (p) formations, Yichang area, Hubei Province, China. a, b Spheroidal microfossil showing similarity to fossilized scalidophoran embryo Markuelia Val’kov 1984 at cleave stage with preserved blastomeres, in general view (a) and enlargement showing details of thin external membrane (b), c, d Pyritized colony of hydroid Sinobryon elongatum Baliński, Sun and Dzik 2014 (c) and enlargement of lateral branch showing elongate zooids (d), e Linguloid brachiopod Leontiella sp. with preserved pyritized vermiform pedicle; see also Baliński and Sun [16], new photograph, f Nearly complete conulariid specimen from the Fenxiang Formation at Jiangiafan, g Partially decorticated specimen of Sphenothallus sp., h–k) Arthropod appendages showing preserved setae (h, k) and setal sockets (i, j); possible longitudinal filaments of phosphatized infesting bacteria visible in the setal sockets (i, j), l–k Phosphatic coralla of antipatharian coral Sinopathes reptans Baliński, Sun and Dzik 2014 showing basal part of a colony with crowded spines (l), spinose branch (m), and partly preserved spinose basal part of colony and erect stem (n), o, p Long sinusoidal nematode tracks from Fenxiang (o) and Dawan (p) formations, q, r Pyritized colony of an enigmatic organism in general view (q) and enlargement of lateral branches (r), s, t Examples of trace fossils on split surfaces