Abstract

Hemichordate relationships remain contentious due to conflicting molecular results [1-7] and the high degree of morphological disparity between the two hemichordate classes, Enteropneusta and Pterobranchia [8-11]. Additionally, hemichordates have a poor fossil record outside of the Cambrian, with the exception of the collagenous tubes of the pterobranchs (which include graptolites). By the middle Cambrian, tube-dwelling colonial pterobranchs [12, 13] and tube-dwelling enteropneusts coexisted [14, 15], supporting the origin of the hemichordate body plan earlier in the Cambrian without clarifying the morphology of their last common ancestor. Here, we describe a new hemichordate, Gyaltsenglossus senis, based on 33 specimens from the 506-million-year-old Burgess Shale (Odaray Mountain, British Columbia). G.senis has a unique combination of soft anatomical characters found in both extant classes of hemichordates, namely a trimeric-vermiform body plan with an elongate proboscis and six feeding arms with tentacles. The trunk possesses a long through-gut and terminates with a bulbous structure potentially used for locomotion and/or as a temporary anchor. There is no evidence of a secreted tube. Our phylogenetic analyses retrieve this new taxon as a stem-group hemichordate, supporting the hypothesis that a vermiform body plan preceded both tube building and colonial ecologies. This new taxon suggests that a bimodal feeding ecology using tentacles to filter feed and a proboscis to deposit feed may be plesiomorphic in hemichordates. Finally, the presence of a muscular, post-anal attachment structure in all known Cambrian hemichordates supports this feature as an additional hemichordate plesiomorphy critical for understanding early hemichordate evolution.

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