4.7 Article

Symbiosis in the Cambrian: enteropneust tubes from the Burgess Shale co-inhabited by commensal polychaetes

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.0061

Keywords

Cambrian explosion; Hemichordata; Annelida; symbiosis; commensalism

Funding

  1. Peter Buck Deep Time post-doctoral fellowship at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
  2. NSERC [341944]

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The study describes a new complex ecological relationship found in the middle Cambrian Burgess Shale, indicating a commensalism between annelids and hemichordates, which is a first in the fossil record. This finding suggests that commensal symbioses in the Cambrian may be more common than currently recognized.
The in situ preservation of animal behaviour in the fossil record is exceedingly rare, but can lead to unique macroecological and macroevolutionary insights, especially regarding early representatives of major animal clades. We describe a new complex ecological relationship from the middle Cambrian Burgess Shale (Raymond Quarry, Canada). More than 30 organic tubes were recorded with multiple enteropneust and polychaete worms preserved within them. Based on the tubicolous nature of fossil enteropneusts, we suggest that they were the tube builders while the co-preserved polychaetes were commensals. These findings mark, to our knowledge, the first record of commensalism within Annelida and Hemichordata in the entire fossil record. The finding of multiple enteropneusts sharing common tubes suggests that either the tubes represent reproductive structures built by larger adults, and the enteropneusts commonly preserved within are juveniles, or these enteropneusts were living as a pseudo-colony without obligate attachment to each other, and the tube was built collaboratively. While neither hypothesis can be ruled out, gregarious behaviour was clearly an early trait of both hemichordates and annelids. Further, commensal symbioses in the Cambrian may be more common than currently recognized.

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