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avatar_Halichoeres

A new Cambrian stem-group comb-jelly

Started by Halichoeres, March 27, 2019, 01:35:55 PM

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Halichoeres

We're not 100% sure where ctenophores (comb-jellies or sea gooseberries) fit in the phylogeny of animals. They've been proposed as sister to the Bilateral, sister to the Cnidaria, sister to the [Cnidaria + Bilateria], or sister to the remaining Metazoa. And since they're soft bodied, the fossil record is gappy. This paper describes a sessile, polyp-shaped (i.e., cnidarian-like) fossil animal that the authors propose as part of the stem-group of the ctenophores. Meet Daihua sanqiong:



This one is from Chengjiang, but there are also likely to be new ctenophore relatives described from Qingjiang (the new Cambrian lagerstätte described elsewhere on this sub-forum). Maybe they'll shed more light on the placement of ctenophores.

Paper (open access): https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(19)30206-4
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Faelrin

Don't think I've ever seen a fossil with coloration like that before (assuming it isn't under some fancy lighting causing that). Absolutely gorgeous specimen.
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Jose S.M.

The preservation of that fossil is beautiful. It's amazing how soft bodied animals can be preserved like that.

Ravonium

Interesting to see that the fossil is so well preseved that they managed to make an approximation of its life appearance (and I have to say, it looks somewhat squid like!). As always, thanks for sharing  :)

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