Thursday, June 3, 2010

A new spin on an ancient predator




More than 100 years after its discovery the Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale of British Columbia Canada, continues to offer up new insight into the history of life.

One of the many enigmatic soft-bodied animals of the 500 million year old Burgess Shale of British Columbia is Nectocaris (fossil shown above) long thought to be a shrimp-like arthropod (reconstruction, above, left), but a recent study shows that the animal is most likely a cephalopod, ancestral to the group includes modern squid, octopus, and the pearly Nautilus (reconstruction above, right).

This re-classification of Nectocaris extends the geologic range of the cephalopods back 30 million years and dramatically changes hypotheses of cephalopod evolutionary history.

Nectocaris does not have an external shell, as did other ancient fossil cephalopods, and this discovery scuttles previous hypotheses that cephalopods evolved the ability to float and then swim after the evolution of their chambered shell. Nectocaris shows that cephalopods shells evolved later in cephalopod evolution, possibly in response to increased predation during the Late Cambrian.

Martin Smith and Jean-Bernard Caron, Nature 2010. Photos by the authors. Reconstructions from Discover Magazine blog

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