4.4 Article

An early Cambrian polyp reveals a potential anemone-like ancestor for medusozoan cnidarians

Journal

PALAEONTOLOGY
Volume 66, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/pala.12637

Keywords

Cnidaria; medusozoan polyp; evolution; early Cambrian; Chengjiang biota

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This study redescribes Conicula striata from the Chengjiang biota in south China, showing that it possessed characteristics of both anthozoans and medusozoan polyps. It is classified as a stem-group medusozoan, suggesting that the diversity of medusozoans derived from an ancestor resembling anemones.
Cnidarians form a disparate phylum of animals and their diploblastic body plan represents a key step in animal evolution. Cnidarians are split into two main classes; anthozoans (sea anemones, corals) are benthic polyps, while medusozoans (hydroids, jellyfishes) generally have alternating life cycle stages of polyps and medusae. A sessile polyp is present in both groups and is widely regarded as the ancestral form of their last common ancestor. However, the nature and anatomy of the ancestral polyp, particularly of medusozoans, is controversial, owing to the divergent body plans of the extant lineages and the scarcity of medusozoan soft tissues in the fossil record. Here, we redescribe Conicula striata Luo & Hu from the early Cambrian Chengjiang biota, south China, which has previously been interpreted as a polyp, lophophorate or deuterostome. Through re-examination of the holotype and 51 exceptionally preserved specimens, we show that C. striata possessed features of both anthozoans and medusozoan polyps. A conical, annulated organic skeleton (periderm) fully encasing a polyp is found in fossil and living medusozoans, while a tubular pharynx extending from the mouth into a gut partitioned by c. 28 mesenteries, resembling the actinopharynx of anthozoans. Our phylogenetic analyses recover C. striata as a stem-group medusozoan, implying that the wealth of medusozoan diversity derived, ultimately, from an anemone-like ancestor.

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