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Huang et al., 2004b

Recent Priapulidae and their Early Cambrian ancestors: comparisons and evolutionary significance

Huang, D., Vannier, J., Chen, J.
DOI
DOI10.1016/j.geobios.2003.04.004
Year2004
JournalGeobios
Volume37
Number2
Pages217-228
Typearticle in journal
LanguageEnglish
Id52792

Abstract

Although priapulid worms form a relatively small phylum in present-day marine environments, they were important animals in Cambrian endobenthic communities. Two Early Cambrian priapulids, namely Xiaoheiqingella peculiaris and Yunnanpriapulus halteroformis nov. gen., nov. sp. from the Maotianshan Shale Lagerstätte of SW China are revised and described. Several key-features of the body plan of Recent Priapulidae are recognized in these two forms: 1) the four-fold body division (introvert, neck, trunk, and caudal appendage); 2) the well-developed introvert armed with ca. 25 longitudinal rows of scalids; 3) the caudal appendage; 4) the pharyngeal teeth arranged in a pentagonal disposition (Xiaoheiqingella); 5) the ventral nerve cord present in Yunnanpriapulus. This morphology indicates close evolutionary relationships with modern priapulids. Xiaoheiqingella and Yunnanpriapulus nov. gen. are tentatively placed within the recent family Priapulidae. The Priapulidae lineage may therefore have a remote origin (Early Cambrian) much older than was previously assumed (Priapulites; Late Carboniferous). The functional morphology of Xiaoheiqingella and Yunnanpriapulus nov. gen. suggests that these two worms were chiefly carnivorous with possible occasional mud-eating habits.

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