| Literature DB >> 36248717 |
Ruiwen Zong1, Russell D C Bicknell2.
Abstract
Durophagous predation in the Cambrian is typically recorded as malformed shells and trilobites, with rarer evidence in the form of coprolites and shelly gut contents. Reporting novel evidence for shell-crushing further expands the understanding of where and when in the Cambrian durophagy was present. To expand the current documentation and present new records of malformed trilobites from the Cambrian of China, we present an injured Redlichia (Pteroredlichia) chinensis from the lower Cambrian Balang Formation, western Hunan, South China. The specimen has two distinct injuries along the thorax. The injuries show different degrees of regeneration, suggesting that the specimen was attacked twice. We propose that the individual may have been targeted more readily for the second attack. This predatory approach would have been highly energy efficient, maximizing net energy gain during the attack. ©2022 Zong and Bicknell.Entities:
Keywords: Cambrian; Predation; Redlichia; Regeneration; South China
Year: 2022 PMID: 36248717 PMCID: PMC9558619 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.14185
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 3.061
Figure 1Geological background map of study area and location of the fossil site.
(A) Cambrian sedimentary facies zones of South China (modified from Zhao et al., 1993). (B) Map of fossil site at Huayuan County, Xiangxi Autonomous Prefecture, Hunan Province. (C) Stratigraphic series showing relative position and age of the Balang Formation (modified from Zhu et al., 2021).
Figure 2Injured Redlichia (Pteroredlichia) chinensis (Walcott, 1905) from the Balang Formation (Cambrian Series 2, Stage 4), Hunan, South China.
(A) Complete specimen (BGEG-HXB-02) showing two injuries. (B, C) Close-up of the injury on the left pleural lobe. (B) V-shaped indentation. (C) Same as B showing overlap of the second (yellow) and third (red) pleural segments and injury (blue). (D, E) Close-up of injury on right pleural lobe. (D) U-shaped indentation. (E) Same as D showing injury (blue). Abbreviation: ts., thoracic segment.