Primordial spiny slug from China was forerunner of world's mollusks
Send a link to a friend
[August 02, 2024]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Earth's roughly 76,000 species of mollusks come
in an impressive variety of forms including clams, oysters, scallops,
mussels, snails, slugs and even some possessing exceptional intelligence
such as octopuses, cuttlefish and squid. But their ancestral form and
early evolutionary history have been tough to decipher.
Fossils discovered in southern China of a curious little marine creature
that lived during the Cambrian Period about 514 million years ago -
essentially a spiny slug - are now providing some clarity about the
initial stages of the mollusk lineage.
The newly identified species, called Shishania aculeata, had a flattened
oval-shaped body averaging a bit more than an inch (3 cm) long and
eight-tenths of an inch (2 cm) wide. Some of the 18 specimens described
by the researchers preserved soft body parts that rarely become
fossilized, providing an unusually detailed accounting of its anatomy.
The top of its body was densely covered with hollow, cone-shaped spines
- resembling those on durian fruit, indigenous to Southeast Asia - for
protection from predators. The spines are made of chitin, the same
material as crab shells.
"On the bottom side, we see a ring of tissue called a girdle that
surrounds an organ called a foot. This is the same feature as the slimy,
muscular sole that you see in slugs and snails. It would have used this
to creep around a muddy seafloor much like slugs and snails do on land
today," said paleontologist Luke Parry of the University of Oxford, one
of the leaders of the study published in the journal Science.
"It may have fed in a shallow marine environment on algae and other
organic matter it could find," added paleontologist Xiaoya Ma of Yunnan
University in China and the University of Exeter in England, another of
the study leaders.
The anatomical features of the underside of its body demonstrated that
it is one of the earliest-known members of the mollusk lineage.
Mollusks are a diverse group of invertebrates, second in size in the
animal kingdom only to arthropods, the group spanning insects, spiders,
lobsters, crabs, centipedes, millipedes and others. Mollusks have soft
bodies composed almost entirely of muscle, boast a well-organized
nervous system, and usually are protected by a shell. Those lacking a
shell, like squid, come from lineages that previously had one.
[to top of second column]
|
A complete specimen of the Cambrian Period invertebrate Shishania
aculeata, a proto-mollusk whose fossils dating to half a billion
years ago were found in China's Yunnan Province, seen from the
dorsal (top) side (left). Spines covering the body of Shishania
aculeata (right). Guangxu Zhang/Luke Parry/Handout via REUTERS
"So this new fossil records what mollusks looked like before they
evolved their shells," Parry said. "It tells us that early mollusks
were covered by protective spines. We found evidence of the cellular
mechanism through which Shishania secreted its protective spines by
looking at them with an electron microscope. We found that they
contained tiny elongate channels that are less than a thousandth of
a millimeter in diameter."
The invertebrate group that includes earthworms also has this type
of secretion system.
Shishania's remains were found by study lead author Guangxu Zhang
when he was a doctoral student at Yunnan University, rescuing
fossils in earth dug up in a Yunnan Province road construction
project.
"I saw under the magnifier that I had with me that the fossils
seemed strange, spiny and completely different from any other
fossils that I had seen," Zhang said.
Other fossils at the site included sponges and horseshoe crab-like
trilobites that shared Shishania's marine realm.
The great diversity among modern mollusks, in body shape and
lifestyle, has made it difficult to elucidate their last common
ancestor and early evolutionary steps. Their diversity evolved
rapidly during an evolutionary event called the Cambrian Explosion,
a critical juncture in the history of life on Earth when a dizzying
array of animals first burst onto the scene.
Parry said Shishania should be viewed as "an evolutionary aunt or
cousin" to today's mollusks, retaining a body plan more primitive
than the actual last common ancestor for all members of the group
now alive.
"I think it's amazing that we can trace animals that are clever
enough to use tools like octopuses back to humble slug-like
beginnings over half a billion years ago," Parry said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |