Abstract

The early Ediacaran Weng'an biota (Doushantuo Formation, South China) provides a rare window onto the period of Earth history in which molecular timescales have inferred the initial phase of crown-metazoan diversification. Interpretation of the embryo-like fossils that dominate the biota remains contentious because they are morphologically simple and so difficult to constrain phylogenetically. Spiralicellula from the Weng'an biota is distinguished by spiral internal bodies, allied through development to Megasphaera or Helicoforamina and interpreted variously as metazoan embryos, encysting protists, or chlorophycean green algae. Here we show, using X-ray microtomography, that Spiralicellula has a single-layered outer envelope and no more than 32 internal cells, often preserving a nucleus and yolk granules. There is no correlation between the extent of spiral development and the number of component cells; rather, the spiral developed with each palintomic stage, associated with cell disaggregation and reorientation. Evidence for envelope thinning and cell loss was observed in all developmental stages, reflecting non-deterministic shedding of gametes or amoebae. The developmental biology of Spiralicellula is similar to Megasphaera and Helicoforamina, which otherwise exhibit more rounds of palintomy. We reject a crown-metazoan affinity for Spiralicellula and all other components of the Weng'an biota, diminishing the probability of crown-metazoan diversification before the early Ediacaran.

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