| Literature DB >> 27703275 |
Rui-Wen Zong1, Ruo-Ying Fan1, Yi-Ming Gong1.
Abstract
A nautiloid conch containing many disarticulated exoskeletons of Omegops cornelius (Phacopidae, Trilobita) was found in the Upper Devonian Hongguleleng Formation of the northwestern margin of the Junggar Basin, NW China. The similar number of cephala, thoraces and pygidia, unbroken thoraces, explicit exuviae, and lack of other macrofossils in the conch, indicate that at least seven individual trilobites had moulted within the nautiloid living chamber, using the vacant chamber of a dead nautiloid as a communal place for ecdysis. This exuvial strategy manifests cryptic behaviour of trilobites, which may have resulted from the adaptive evolution induced by powerful predation pressure, unstable marine environments, and competition pressure of organisms occupying the same ecological niche in the Devonian period. The unusual presence of several trilobites moulting within a nautiloid conch is possibly associated with social behaviours in face of a serious crisis. New materials in this study open a window for understanding the survival strategy of marine benthic organisms, especially predator-prey interactions and the behavioural ecology of trilobites in the middle Palaeozoic.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27703275 PMCID: PMC5050512 DOI: 10.1038/srep34914
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Sketch showing the sampling locality and the stratigraphic column of the lower Member of the Hongguleleng Formation.
(conodont biozones after Suttner et al.32, drawn by R.-W. Z. using the CorelDRAW X5 software, Copyright (c) 2016 R.-W. Z. and its licensors. All rights reserved).
Figure 2Nautiloid containing disarticulated exoskeletons of Omegops cornelius, as well as trilobites and bioclastic limestones outside the conch.
(A–E) The distribution of the sclerites of Omegops in the nautiloid living chamber (HB2013-01), figure B presenting the status after the specimen in figure C was stripped from the previous specimen in figure A, figure D is the reverse side of the specimen in figure C, figure E showing the sclerites of Omegops near the septum after 4 septa were stripped from the previous specimen. (F–H) The exuviae of Omegops in the living chamber, showing the dorsal view, side view and back view, respectively. (I,J) The exuviae of Omegops outside the conch from the argillaceous limestones of the Hongguleleng Formation, figure I (HB-04) showing the enrolled thorax and pygidium, but with cephalon nearby, figure J (HB2013-05) showing the cephalon situated in the right-anterior of thorax with distinct rotation. (K) The cluster of cephala of Omegops outside the conch from the bioclastic limestones of the Hongguleleng Formation, and all cephala are preserved dorsal side upward (HB213-04). (L) Bioclastic limestones of the storm bed, showing the sclerites of Omegops buried together with crinoids, bryozoans, corals and other fossils (HB2013-02). c. = cephalon, t. = thorax, t.s. = thoracic segment, p. = pygidium, tr. = trilobite, co. = coral, cr. = crinoids, br. = bryozoans. The scales of figures (F–H) are 5 mm, other scales are 10 mm. (Photographs taken by R.-W. Z.).
Figure 3Reconstruction of Omegops moulting within the nautiloid living chamber.
(A) Omegops has completed moulting and moved away from the nautiloid. (B) Omegops leaving the nautiloid after moulting. (C) Omegops moulting within the living chamber. (D) Omegops moving outside the living chamber normally. (E) Previous exuviae are buried gradually by sediments. (F,G) Previous exuviae are moved to the edge of the nautiloid by Omegops preparing for moulting, inducing overturned cephalon (F) and scattered thoracic segments (G). (drawn by R.-W. Z. using the CorelDRAW X5 software, Copyright (c) 2015–2016 R.-W. Z. and its licensors. All rights reserved).