18 research outputs found
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Discovery of 505-million-year old chitin in the basal demosponge Vauxia gracilenta
Sponges are probably the earliest branching animals, and their fossil record dates back to the Precambrian. Identifying their skeletal structure and composition is thus a crucial step in improving our understanding of the early evolution of metazoans. Here, we present the discovery of 505-million-year-old chitin, found in exceptionally well preserved Vauxia gracilenta sponges from the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale. Our new findings indicate that, given the right fossilization conditions, chitin is stable for much longer than previously suspected. The preservation of chitin in these fossils opens new avenues for research into other ancient fossil groups
First post - Cambrian records of the reticulosan sponges Valospongia and Hintzespongia from the late Tremadocian of North Wales
A new sponge fauna has been discovered in silty mudstone of the early Migneintian (late Tremadocian, Ordovician) of
North Wales. The assemblage is dominated by reticulosan hexactinellids, including several species bearing parietal gaps;
this feature is common among Cambrian hexactinellids, but is rare in Ordovician faunas. Of particular significance is
Valospongia bufo sp. nov., representing the first record of the genus outside the Middle Cambrian of Utah, USA. A single
specimen assigned to Hintzespongia? sp. is also described, and also represents the first occurrence outside the Laurentian
Burgess Shale-type faunas. This fauna indicates that deeper-water hexactinellids from the Burgess Shale-type faunas
survived in places into at least the Early Ordovician, in addition to the Cambrian-type protomonaxonid assemblage seen
in the Fezouata Biota
An enigmatic, possibly chemosymbiotic, hexactinellid sponge from the early Cambrian of South China
Six specimens of a strongly curved, cylindrical hexactinellid sponge have been recovered from the Tommotian–
Atdabanian Hetang Biota of South China, and are described as Decumbispongia yuani gen. et sp. nov. The robust,
thick−walled sponge shows no evidence of an osculum or basal structures, and the body form is inconsistent with an upright, filter−feeding life position. Interpretations as a detritivore feeding by amoeboid extensions, or as a facultative
chemosynthetic symbiosis of sponge and bacteria are considered. The latter interpretation is preferred due to the highly
constrained body shape, and the body form is interpreted from this perspective. The species indicates that Cambrian
sponges occupied at least some autecological niches that appear to have been vacant since that time
Sponge spicule assemblages from the Cambrian (Series 2?3) of North Greenland (Laurentia) : systematics and biogeography
Isolated microscopic spicules from disarticulated scleritomes demonstrate the presence of a diverse sponge fauna otherwise not evident from the macrofossil record in carbonate successions deposited during the un-named Cambrian Series 2 and Cambrian Series 3 (Miaolingian) in North Greenland. Most of the spicule morphotypes are not recognised from faunas of articulated sponges known from contemporaneous siliciclastic strata elsewhere. Assemblages are described in terms of four Cambrian stages and contain numerous spicule morphotypes not previously recorded from Laurentia. Many of the spicules can be correlated worldwide, however, extending current knowledge of the biogeographic distribution of sponge spicule-based taxa in the Cambrian. In particular, similar Cambrian Stage 4 (Series 2) and Miaolingian assemblages (Wuliuan, Drumian and Guzhangian stages) faunas are recorded from tropical palaeolatitudes in Australia, South China, Siberia and Laurentia, although this may in part reflect a methodology focused on the preparation of the carbonate samples that dominate these successions. New spicule-based taxa: Eiffelia floriformis n. sp., Australispongia? inuak n. sp., Celtispongia dorte n. gen. n. sp., Sanningasoqia borealis n. gen. n. sp., Speciosuspongia inughuitorum n. sp., Sulukispicula gelidae n. gen. n. sp