Ursactis comosa Osawa, Caron & Gaines, 2023 DOI: 10.1098/rsos.221400 drawing by Danielle Dufault / Royal Ontario Museum. |
Abstract
Early annelid evolution is mostly known from 13 described species from Cambrian Burgess Shale-type Lagerstätten. We introduce a new exceptionally well-preserved polychaete, Ursactis comosa gen. et sp. nov., from the Burgess Shale (Wuliuan Stage). This small species (3–15 mm) is the most abundant Cambrian polychaete known to date. Most specimens come from Tokumm Creek, a new Burgess Shale locality in northern Kootenay National Park, British Columbia, Canada. Ursactis has a pair of large palps, thin peristomial neurochaetae and biramous parapodia bearing similarly sized capillary neurochaetae and notochaetae, except for segments six to nine, which also have longer notochaetae. The number of segments in this polychaete range between 8 and 10 with larger individuals having 10 segments. This number of segments in Ursactis is remarkably small compared with other polychaetes, including modern forms. Specimens with 10 segments show significant size variations, and the length of each segment increases with the body length, indicating that body growth was primarily achieved by increasing the size of existing segments rather than adding new ones. This contrasts with most modern polychaetes, which typically have a larger number of segments through additions of segments throughout life. The inferred growth pattern in Ursactis suggests that annelids had evolved control over segment addition by the mid-Cambrian.
Keywords: Burgess Shale, polychaete, development, stem-group annelid, gregarious behaviour, body tagmatization
Systematic palaeontology
Phylum: Annelida Lamarck, 1809.
Ursactis comosa gen. et sp. nov.
Etymology: Ursa for the constellation Ursa Major, and actis, a Greek word for a ray, referring to the species' starry appearance and the clustered occurrence of fossils; comos, a Latin word meaning ‘having long hair,’ for its long capillary chaetae, in particular some notochaetae on segments six to nine.
Locality and stratigraphy: One specimen of Ursactis sp. (figure 1d) comes from the Collins Quarry on Mt. Stephen, Yoho National Park, Kicking Horse Shale Member. All the specimens of U. comosa come from two stratigraphic intervals within the upper part of the Burgess Shale Formation, Cambrian (Miaolingian Series, Wuliuan Stage), Ehmaniella biozone, at the Tokumm Creek locality of the Marble Canyon area, northern Kootenay National Park, British Columbia, Canada.
Diagnosis for genus and species: Polychaete worm possessing maximum 10 chaetigers, excluding the peristomium, with biramous parapodia yielding simple capillary chaetae. Approximately 8–12 chaetae on each neuropodium and notopodium, and among chaetigers one to eight. The last two chaetigers have approximately five and two chaetae, respectively. Up to five notochaetae on chaetigers six to nine, double the length of other chaetae on the same chaetigers.
Conclusion:
The known disparity and ecological diversity of Cambrian annelids have expanded in recent years thanks to the discovery of new species, including tube-dwelling forms [Chen, et al., 2020; Nanglu & Caron, 2021] and forms living in symbiosis with other taxa [Nanglu & Caron, 2021]. The clustering behaviour of Ursactis also implies that some polychaetes probably occupied substantial space and resources in some areas, suggesting a greater ecological role in local ecosystems.
The morphology of Ursactis may provide important clues to understanding the developmental patterns of the ancestral annelid. First, the occurrence of longer chaetae on specific segments suggests an early example of simple body tagmatization in annelids. Second, the surprisingly small number of segments and minor variation in segment number in this new polychaete implies that the addition of segments was terminated earlier in ontogeny than in modern polychaetes. Continued study of the modes of growth in fossilized annelids and of post-larval development of extant polychaetes would provide important clues to understanding the evolution of developmental patterns in the Annelida.
life reconstruction of Ursactis comosa gen. et sp. nov. drawing by Danielle Dufault / Royal Ontario Museum. |
Hatena Osawa, Jean-Bernard Caron and Robert R. Gaines. 2023. First Record of Growth Patterns in A Cambrian Annelid. Royal Society Open Science. DOI: 10.1098/rsos.221400