Abstract

BackgroundEcdysozoa are the moulting protostomes, including arthropods, tardigrades, and nematodes. Both the molecular and fossil records indicate that Ecdysozoa is an ancient group originating in the terminal Proterozoic, and exceptional fossil biotas show their dominance and diversity at the beginning of the Phanerozoic. However, the nature of the ecdysozoan common ancestor has been difficult to ascertain due to the extreme morphological diversity of extant Ecdysozoa, and the lack of early diverging taxa in ancient fossil biotas.ResultsHere we re-describe Acosmia maotiania from the early Cambrian Chengjiang Biota of Yunnan Province, China and assign it to stem group Ecdysozoa. Acosmia features a two-part body, with an anterior proboscis bearing a terminal mouth and muscular pharynx, and a posterior annulated trunk with a through gut. Morphological phylogenetic analyses of the protostomes using parsimony, maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference, with coding informed by published experimental decay studies, each placed Acosmia as sister taxon to Cycloneuralia + Panarthropoda—i.e. stem group Ecdysozoa. Ancestral state probabilities were calculated for key ecdysozoan nodes, in order to test characters inferred from fossils to be ancestral for Ecdysozoa. Results support an ancestor of crown group ecdysozoans sharing an annulated vermiform body with a terminal mouth like Acosmia, but also possessing the pharyngeal armature and circumoral structures characteristic of Cambrian cycloneuralians and lobopodians.ConclusionsAcosmia is the first taxon placed in the ecdysozoan stem group and provides a constraint to test hypotheses on the early evolution of Ecdysozoa. Our study suggests acquisition of pharyngeal armature, and therefore a change in feeding strategy (e.g. predation), may have characterised the origin and radiation of crown group ecdysozoans from Acosmia-like ancestors.

Highlights

  • Ecdysozoa are the moulting protostomes, including arthropods, tardigrades, and nematodes

  • Hypotheses concerning the origins and early evolution of multiple ecdysozoan subgroups have been proposed from their spectacular Cambrian fossil record [13,14,15,16,17,18], but all taxa fall within the Cycloneuralia (Scalidophora + Nematoida) or Panarthropoda, with little known about the ancestral characteristics of Ecdysozoa beyond character optimisation from trees of crown group taxa [14, 19]

  • The early Cambrian Chengjiang taxon Acosmia maotiania was not a priapulan, but a worm belonging to the stem-lineage of Ecdysozoa, and represents the first fossil taxon placed as such

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Summary

Introduction

Ecdysozoa are the moulting protostomes, including arthropods, tardigrades, and nematodes. Hypotheses concerning the origins and early evolution of multiple ecdysozoan subgroups have been proposed from their spectacular Cambrian fossil record [13,14,15,16,17,18], but all taxa fall within the Cycloneuralia (Scalidophora + Nematoida) or Panarthropoda, with little known about the ancestral characteristics of Ecdysozoa beyond character optimisation from trees of crown group taxa [14, 19]. Scalids are hollow and radially arranged sensory and locomotive structures that adorn the introverts of all priapulans, kinorhynchs and loriciferans [21, 26], and give rise to the clade name Scalidophora These diverse but regularly arranged armature structures on the proboscis region are a chief diagnostic character in recognising fossil scalidophorans. Acosmia’s status as a priapulan is doubtful

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