4.5 Article

Humble origins for a successful strategy: complete enrolment in early Cambrian olenellid trilobites

Journal

BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 9, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2013.0679

Keywords

Mummaspis; Mural formation; Lower Dyeran; functional morphology

Funding

  1. CONACYT (Mexico)
  2. SEP (Mexico)
  3. University of Cambridge Trusts (UK)
  4. Darwin College (UK)
  5. Chinese Academy of Sciences [2012Y1ZB0010]

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Trilobites are typified by the behavioural and morphological ability to enrol their bodies, most probably as a defence mechanism against adverse environmental conditions or predators. Although most trilobites could enrol at least partially, there is uncertainty about whether olenellids-among the most phylogenetically and stratigraphically basal representatives-could perform this behaviour because of their poorly caudalized trunk and scarcity of coaptative devices. Here, we report complete-but not encapsulating-enrolment for the olenellid genus Mummaspis from the early Cambrian Mural Formation in Alberta, the earliest direct evidence of this strategy in the fossil record of polymerid trilobites. Complete enrolment in olenellids was achieved through a combination of ancestral morphological features, and thus provides new information on the character polarity associated with this key trilobite adaptation.

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