A giant Ordovician anomalocaridid

Anomalocaridids, giant lightly sclerotized invertebrate predators, occur in a number of exceptionally preserved early and middle Cambrian (542-501 million years ago) biotas and have come to symbolize the unfamiliar morphologies displayed by stem organisms in faunas of the Burgess Shale type. They ar...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature
Main Authors: Van Roy, Peter, Briggs, Derek EG
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/1252164
http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-1252164
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature09920
https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/1252164/file/1252169
Description
Summary:Anomalocaridids, giant lightly sclerotized invertebrate predators, occur in a number of exceptionally preserved early and middle Cambrian (542-501 million years ago) biotas and have come to symbolize the unfamiliar morphologies displayed by stem organisms in faunas of the Burgess Shale type. They are characterized by a pair of anterior, segmented appendages, a circlet of plates around the mouth, and an elongate segmented trunk lacking true tergites with a pair of flexible lateral lobes per segment(1,2). Disarticulated body parts, such as the anterior appendages and oral circlet, had been assigned to a range of taxonomic groups-but the discovery of complete specimens from the middle Cambrian Burgess Shale showed that these disparate elements all belong to a single kind of animal(3). Phylogenetic analyses support a position of anomalocaridids in the arthropod stem, as a sister group to the euarthropods(4-6). The anomalocaridids were the largest animals in Cambrian communities. The youngest unequivocal examples occur in the middle Cambrian Marjum Formation of Utah(7) but an arthropod retaining some anomalocaridid characteristics is present in the Devonian of Germany(5). Here we report the post-Cambrian occurrence of anomalocaridids, from the Early Ordovician (488-472 million years ago) Fezouata Biota(8) in southeastern Morocco, including specimens larger than any in Cambrian biotas. These giant animals were an important element of some marine communities for about 30 million years longer than previously realized. The Moroccan specimens confirm the presence of a dorsal array of flexible blades attached to a transverse rachis on the trunk segments; these blades probably functioned as gills.