arthropods

520-million-year-old-larva-fossil-reveals-the-origins-of-arthropods

520-million-year-old larva fossil reveals the origins of arthropods

Loads of lobopods —

Early arthropod development illuminated by a microscopic fossil.

Image of a small grey object, curved around its abdomen, with a series of small appendages on the bottom.

Enlarge / The fossil in question, oriented with its head to the left.

Yang Jie / Zhang Xiguang

Around half a billion years ago, in what is now the Yunnan Province of China, a tiny larva was trapped in mud. Hundreds of millions of years later, after the mud had long since become the black shales of the Yuan’shan formation, the larva surfaced again, a meticulously preserved time capsule that would unearth more about the evolution of arthropods.

Youti yuanshi is barely visible to the naked eye. Roughly the size of a poppy seed, it is preserved so well that its exoskeleton is almost completely intact, and even the outlines of what were once its internal organs can be seen through the lens of a microscope. Durham University researchers who examined it were able to see features of both ancient and modern arthropods. Some of these features told them how the simpler, more wormlike ancestors of living arthropods evolved into more complex organisms.

The research team also found that Y. yuanshi, which existed during the Cambrian Explosion (when most of the main animal groups started to appear on the fossil record), has certain features in common with extant arthropods, such as crabs, velvet worms, and tardigrades. “The deep evolutionary position of Youti yuanshi… illuminat[es] the internal anatomical changes that propelled the rise and diversification of [arthropods],” they said in a study recently published in Nature.

Inside out and outside in

While many fossils preserved in muddy environments like the Yuan’shan formation are flattened by compression, Y. yuanshi remained three-dimensional, making it easier to examine. So what exactly did this larva look like on the outside and inside?

The research team could immediately tell that Y. yuanshi was a lobopodian. Lobopodians are a group of extinct arthropods with long bodies and stubby legs, or lobopods. There is a pair of lobopods in the middle of each of its twenty segments, and these segments also get progressively shorter from the front to back of the body. Though soft tissue was not preserved, spherical outlines suggest an eye on each side of the head, though whether these were compound eyes is unknown. This creature had a stomodeum—the precursor to a mouth—but no anus. It would have had to both take in food and dispose of waste through its mouth.

Youti yuanshi has a cavity, known as the perivisceral cavity, that surrounds the outline of a tube that is thought to have once been the gut. The creature’s gut ends without an opening, which explains its lack of an anus. Inside each segment, there is a pair of voids toward the middle. The researchers think these are evidence of digestive glands, especially after comparing them to digestive glands in the fossils of other arthropods from the same era.

A ring around the mouth of the larva was once a circumoral nerve ring, which connected with nerves that extend to eyes and appendages in the first segment. Inside its head is a void that contained the brain. The shape of this empty chamber gives some insight into how the brain was structured. From what the researchers could see, the brain of Y. yuanshi had wedge-shaped frontal portion, and the rest of the brain was divided into two sections, as evidenced by the outline of a membrane in between them.

Way, way, way back then and now

Given its physical characteristics, the researchers think that Y. yuanshi displays features of both extinct and extant arthropods. Some are ancestral characteristics present in all arthropods, living and extinct. Others are ancestral characteristics that may have been present in extinct arthropods but are only present in some living arthropods.

Among the features present in all arthropods today is the protocerebrum; its evolutionary precursor was the circumoral nerve ring present in Y. yuanshi. The protocerebrum is the first segment of the arthropod brain, which controls the eyes and appendages, such as antennae in velvet worms and the mouthparts in tardigrades. Another feature of Y. yuanshi present in extant and extinct arthropods is its circulatory system, which is similar to that of modern arthropods, especially crustaceans.

Lobopods are a morphological feature of Y. yuanshi that are now found only in some arthropods—tardigrades and velvet worms. Many more species of lobopodians existed during the Cambrian. The lobopodians also had a distinctively structured circulatory system in their legs and other appendages, which is closest to that of velvet worms.

“The architecture of the nervous system informs the early configuration of the [arthropod] brain and its associated appendages and sensory organs, clarifying homologies across [arthropods],” the researchers said in the same study.

Yuti yuanshi is still holding on to some mysteries. They mostly have to do with the fact that it is a larva—what it looked like as an adult can only be guessed at, and it’s possible that this species developed compound eyes or flaps for swimming by the time it reached adulthood. Whether it is the larva of an already-known species of extinct lobopod is an open question. Maybe the answers are buried somewhere in the Yuan’shan shale.

Nature, 2024. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07756-8

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500-million-year-old-fossil-is-the-earliest-branch-of-the-spider’s-lineage

500 million-year-old fossil is the earliest branch of the spider’s lineage

Creepy, but no longer crawly —

A local fossil collector in Morocco found the specimen decades ago.

Image of a brown fossil with a large head and many body segments, embedded in a grey-green rock.

In the early 2000s, local fossil collector Mohamed ‘Ou Said’ Ben Moula discovered numerous fossils at Fezouata Shale, a site in Morocco known for its well-preserved fossils from the Early Ordovician period, roughly 480 million years ago. Recently, a team of researchers at the University of Lausanne (UNIL) studied 100 of these fossils and identified one of them as the earliest ancestor of modern-day chelicerates, a group that includes spiders, scorpions, and horseshoe crabs.

The fossil preserves the species Setapedites abundantis, a tiny animal that crawled and swam near the bottom of a 100–200-meter-deep ocean near the South Pole 478 million years ago. It was 5 to 10 millimeters long and fed on organic matter in the seafloor sediments. “Fossils of what is now known as S. abundantis have been found early on—one specimen mentioned in the 2010 paper that recognized the importance of this biota. However, this creature wasn’t studied in detail before simply because scientists focused on other taxa first,” Pierre Gueriau, one of the researchers and a junior lecturer at UNIL, told Ars Technica.

The study from Gueriau and his team is the first to describe S. abundantis and its connection to modern-day chelicerates (also called euchelicerates). It holds great significance, because “the origin of chelicerates has been one of the most tangled knots in the arthropod tree of life, as there has been a lack of fossils between 503 to 430 million years ago,” Gueriau added.

An ancestor of spiders

The study authors used X-ray scanners to reconstruct the anatomy of 100 fossils from the Fezouata Shale in 3D. When they compared the anatomical features of these ancient animals with those of chelicerates, they noticed several similarities between S. abundantis and various ancient and modern-day arthropods, including horseshoe crabs, scorpions, and spiders.

For instance, the nature and arrangement of the head appendages or ‘legs’ in S. abundantis were homologous with those of present-day horseshoe crabs and Cambrian arthropods that existed between 540 to 480 million years ago. Moreover, like spiders and scorpions, the organism exhibited body tagmosis, where the body is organized into different functional sections.

Setapedites abundantis contributes to our understandings of the origin and early evolution of two key euchelicerate characters: the transition from biramous to uniramous prosomal appendages, and body tagmosis,” the study authors note.

Currently, two Cambrian-era arthropods, Mollisonia plenovenatrix and Habelia optata are generally considered the earliest ancestors of chelicerates (not all scientists accept this idea). Both lived around 500 million years ago. When we asked how these two differ from S. abundantis, Gueriau replied, “Habelia and Mollisonia represent at best early-branching lineages in the phylogenetic tree. While S. abundantis is found to represent, together with a couple of other fossils, the earliest branching lineage within chelicerates.”

This means Habelia and Mollisonia are relatives of the ancestors of modern-day chelicerates. On the other side, S. abundantis represents the first group that split after the chelicerate clade was established, making it the earliest member of the lineage. “These findings bring us closer to untangling the origin story of arthropods, as they allow us to fill the anatomical gap between Cambrian arthropods and early-branching chelicerates,” Gueriau told Ars Technica.

S. abundantis connects other fossils

The researchers faced many challenges during their study. For instance, the small size of the fossils made observations and interpretation complicated. They overcame this limitation by examining a large number of specimens—fortunately, S. abundantis fossils were abundant in the samples they studied. However, these fossils have yet to reveal all their secrets.

“Some of S. abundantis’ anatomical features allow for a deeper understanding of the early evolution of the chelicerate group and may even link other fossil forms, whose relationships are still highly debated, to this group,” Gueriau said. For instance, the study authors noticed a ventral protrusion at the rear of the organism. Such a feature is observed for the first time in chelicerates but is known in other primitive arthropods.

“This trait could thus bring together many other fossils with chelicerates and further resolve the early branches of the arthropod tree. So the next step for this research is to investigate deeper this feature on a wide range of fossils and its phylogenetic implications,” Gueriau added.

Nature Communications, 2023. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-48013-w  (About DOIs)

Rupendra Brahambhatt is an experienced journalist and filmmaker. He covers science and culture news, and for the last five years, he has been actively working with some of the most innovative news agencies, magazines, and media brands operating in different parts of the globe.

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