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Extinct Cambrian group of animals From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vetulicolia[note 1] is a clade of bilaterian animals encompassing several extinct species belonging to the Cambrian period.[2][3] The clade was created by Degan Shu and his research team in 2001,[4] and named after Vetulicola cuneata, the first species of the phylum described in 1987.[5]
This article's factual accuracy may be compromised due to out-of-date information. (September 2024) |
Vetulicolia | |
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Fossil of Vetulicola cuneata | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Clade?: | †Vetulicolia Shu et al. 2001 |
Type species | |
†Vetulicola cuneata Hou, 1987 | |
Classes | |
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The vetulicolian body plan comprises two parts: a voluminous rostral (anterior) forebody, tipped with an anteriorly positioned mouth and lined with a lateral row of five round to oval-shaped openings on each side, which have been interpreted as gills (or at least orifices in the vicinity of the pharynx); and a caudal (posterior) section that primitively comprises seven body segments and functions as a tail. All vetulicolians lack preserved appendages of any kind, having no legs, feelers or even eye spots.[6] The area where the anterior and posterior parts join is constricted.[7]
Their taxonomic affinity has been uncertain; they have been interpreted as stem- and crown-group arthropods, stem-group vertebrates,[8] and early deuterostomes (a group which as a whole includes the vertebrates, other invertebrate chordates, echinoderms and hemichordates). The general scientific consensus before 2001 considered them early limbless arthropods but now considers them early deuterostomes.[9] Vetulicolian fossils examined in 2014 show the presence of notochord-like structures, and it was concluded that vetulicolians are crown-group chordates and probably related to modern tunicates.[10] Research from 2017 rather indicates vetulicolians are related to Saccorhytus, another basal deuterostome group,[11] although another study shows possibility that Saccorhytus is ecdysozoan instead of deuterostome.[12] A 2024 paper, however, found vetulicolians to be a paraphyletic group at the base of Chordata. [13] Banffozoa’s inclusion within this group is dubious, due to their lack of gill slits and apparent gut diverticula, and so they may be within Protostomia instead.[14]
Vetulicolia as a phylum was created by Chinese palaeontologist Degan Shu and his research team at the Northwest University in Xi'an, China, along with Simon Conway Morris at the University of Cambridge in 2001.[4] The name was derived from Vetulicola cuneata, the first species described by Hou Xian-guang in 1987 from the Lower Cambrian Chiungchussu Formation in Chengjiang, China.[3][5] The purpose was to include all related Cambrian animals known under the families Didazoonidae (Didazoon, Pomatrum, and Xidazoon) and Vetulicolidae (Vetulicola, and Banffia) as a separate group of animals.[2][4] Other animals which may be related include the yunnanozoans.[4]
The taxonomic placement of the vetulicolians remains controversial. The original researcher Shu is of the opinion that the vetulicolians probably represent an early type of deuterostomes, and that this implies that segmentation in cephalochordates and vertebrates may be derived from the common ancestor of protostomes and deuterostomes.[8] However, Derek Briggs of Yale University and his team who described Skeemella from the Middle Cambrian of Utah regard it as having affinity to protostomes with important arthropod features, thus confounding assignment of Vetulicolia to Deuterostomia.[15] Thurston C. Lacalli of the University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Canada, agreed that the group are deuterostomes, but suggested that the animals were more likely related to tunicates.[16]
Dominguez and Jefferies have argued, based on morphological analysis, that Vetulicola (and by implication, other vetulicolians) is a urochordate, and probably a stem-group larvacean. Some question the relation to tunicates and larvaceans, as there is no evidence of segmentation in tunicates, larval or adult, that is comparable to segmentation in vetulicolians, that the anus of urochordates is within the atrium, while that of vetulicolians is positioned at the terminal end of the tail, and, perhaps most importantly, there is no exhalant siphon, or analogous structure, seen in vetulicolians.[17] However, a discovery of a new vetulicolian, Nesonektris aldridgei, from Australia in 2014 supported a position close to urochordates for vetulicolians.[10]
A 2024 phylogenetic analysis by Mussini and colleagues found vetulicolians to be a paraphyletic group of stem-chordates, lying outside a clade formed by Yunnanozoon, Cathaymyrus, Pikaia and crown-chordates.[13]
Chordata |
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Vetulicolia | |||||||||
From their superficially tadpole-like forms, leaf or paddle-shaped tails, and various degrees of streamlining, it is assumed that all vetulicolians discovered to date were swimming animals that spent much, if not all, of their time living in water.[17] Some groups, like the genus Vetulicola, were more streamlined (complete with ventral keels) than other groups, such as the tadpole-like Didazoonidae.[17]
Because all vetulicolians had mouths which had no features for chewing or grasping, it is assumed that they were not predators.[17] Since vetulicolians possessed gill slits, many researchers regard these organisms as planktivores. The sediment infills in the guts of their fossils have caused some to suggest that they were deposit feeders. This idea has been contested, as deposit feeders tend to have straight guts, whereas the hindguts of vetulicolians were spiral-shaped. Some researchers propose that the vetulicolians were "selective deposit-feeders" which actively swam from one region of the seafloor to another, while supplementing their nutrition with filter-feeding.[17]
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