4.1 Article

A possible erect coralline alga from the Ediacaran Dengying Formation in the Zhenba area of South China

Journal

JOURNAL OF PALEONTOLOGY
Volume 96, Issue 5, Pages 1209-1222

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/jpa.2022.33

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Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China [41890845, 42102012, 41621003, 41930319]
  2. 111 Project [D17013]
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB26000000]
  4. Key Scientific and Technological Innovation Team Project in Shaanxi Province

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A new taxon of erect coralline algae was discovered in the Zhenba microfossil assemblage from the Ediacaran Dengying Formation in South China. This finding suggests that early coralline algae were more diverse than previously thought and their morphological diversification and ecological expansion likely occurred in the middle to late Ediacaran.
Studies of molecular biology suggest a deep origin of coralline red algae in the Neoproterozoic, but unequivocal representatives have not been found in Precambrian rocks. Such scarcity in the fossil record significantly limits our knowledge regarding the origin and early evolution of this group. Phosphatized, fragmented columnar microfossils from the Zhenba microfossil assemblage at the base of the Ediacaran Dengying Formation, South China are presented. Morphologically they represent a novel taxon characterized by: (1) variable and irregularly shaped cross sections, and (2) discontinuous, nonisopachous laminae transversely stacked inside the columns. Integrated morphological comparisons favor their interpretation as probable erect coralline algae. Anatomically, the Zhenba columns resemble present-day geniculate coralline algae in columnar thalli and stromatolithic tissue construction, although they differ from modern geniculate corallines in lacking highly calcified skeletons and tissue-organ differentiation. These anatomical similarities collectively suggest that the Zhenba columns probably represent stem-group coralline algae. The new finding indicates that early coralline algae could be more diverse than previously thought, and their initial morphological diversification and resultant ecological expansion probably occurred in the middle to late Ediacaran.

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