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Vinn et al., 2025a

Ediacaran-type non-mineralized tube-dwelling organisms persisted into the early Cambrian (Terreneuvian) in Baltica

Vinn, O., Nanglu, K., Wilson, M. A., Isakar, M., Toom, U.
DOI
DOI10.1016/j.gr.2024.09.009
Year2025
JournalGondwana Research
Volume137
Pages29-35
Typearticle in journal
Estonian author
LanguageEnglish
Id50058

Abstract

The Ediacaran taxon Conotubus hemiannulatus has been discovered in the Terreneuvian blue clays of Estonia. Alongside Conotubus, Gaojiashania-like tubes are also found in these clays. These tubes are fully compressed and pyritized. The well-developed peristomes of Conotubus might have provided stability if the living worm was partially buried in the soft sea floor, suggesting that Conotubus was a sessile suspension feeder. The presence of the archaic Conotubus hemiannulatus in the Fortunian of Estonia indicates that the tube morphology of some cloudinids did not change between the Ediacaran and the Terreneuvian. The existence of these old-fashioned cloudinids in the Terreneuvian suggests either that the early Cambrian ecosystem in Baltica was not significantly different from that of the Ediacaran, or that cloudinids with organic tubes were more resilient to ecological changes than previously thought. Most Terreneuvian faunas originate from lower latitudes, whereas Baltica, during the Terreneuvian, was located at middle-high latitudes and experienced a cold climate. We hypothesize that the cold climate zone ecosystem was more archaic in the Fortunian than the tropical ecosystem, providing a final refuge for the Ediacaran non-mineralized tubicolous organisms. The increased competition pressure from diverse modern animals in the tropics could have driven Ediacaran-type non-mineralized tubicolous organisms to seek refuge in the colder regions of the ocean, where the competition from more advanced animals was less intense

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