The developmental biology of Charnia and the eumetazoan affinity of the Ediacaran rangeomorphs
Rangeomorphs represent a long-extinct group of eumetazoans with a bodyplan unlike anything alive today. Molecular timescales estimate that early animal lineages diverged tens of millions of years before their earliest unequivocal fossil evidence. The Ediacaran macrobiota (~574 to 538 million years a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Science advances 2021-07, Vol.7 (30) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Rangeomorphs represent a long-extinct group of eumetazoans with a bodyplan unlike anything alive today.
Molecular timescales estimate that early animal lineages diverged tens of millions of years before their earliest unequivocal fossil evidence. The Ediacaran macrobiota (~574 to 538 million years ago) are largely eschewed from this debate, primarily due to their extreme phylogenetic uncertainty, but remain germane. We characterize the development of
Charnia masoni
and establish the affinity of rangeomorphs, among the oldest and most enigmatic components of the Ediacaran macrobiota. We provide the first direct evidence for the internal interconnected nature of rangeomorphs and show that
Charnia
was constructed of repeated branches that derived successively from pre-existing branches. We find homology and rationalize morphogenesis between disparate rangeomorph taxa, before producing a phylogenetic analysis, resolving
Charnia
as a stem-eumetazoan and expanding the anatomical disparity of that group to include a long-extinct bodyplan. These data bring competing records of early animal evolution into closer agreement, reformulating our understanding of the evolutionary emergence of animal bodyplans. |
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ISSN: | 2375-2548 2375-2548 |
DOI: | 10.1126/sciadv.abe0291 |