Saturday, October 18, 2025

[Paleontology • 2025] Oura megale • A large early Cambrian Deuteropod with a delta-shaped tailpiece


 Oura megale O’Flynn, Williams & Liu, 

in O’Flynn, Williams, Thomas, Hou et Liu, 2025. 

ABSTRACT
We describe Oura megale n. gen. n. sp., a large (ca. 14 cm long) euarthropod from the lower Cambrian Chengjiang Konservat-Lagerstätte of Yunnan Province, China. It possesses stalked, compound eyes and a possible raptorial frontal appendage (synapomorphies and symplesiomorphies of lower stem- and upper stem-group euarthropods, respectively), but in combination with deuteropodan synapomorphies (e.g., a multi-segmented head). Micro-X-ray fluorescence shows a thorax that consists of 10 comparatively long and five comparatively short segments. The terminal segment articulates with a large, delta-shaped tailpiece that may have conferred high positional manoeuvrability in the water column. The phylogenetic position of O. megale n. gen. n. sp. in the euarthropod stem may add support to the homology of raptorial frontal appendages between lower stem-group euarthropods and deuteropods.

Keywords: new genus; new species; Cambrian Chengjiang biota; euarthropod; micro-X-ray fluorescence; tailpiece

 Oura megale n. gen n. sp. (YKLP 17237).
A, photograph of ventral view. B, Fe map. C, composite line drawing. D, F1 map. E, P map. F, F1 map of head region. G, P map of head region.
 Abbreviations: l, left; r, right; A1, frontal appendage; ex.A6, exopod of 5th head limb on head segment 6; an, cephalic segment (n); as, anterior sclerite; cf, compactional fold; e, eye; es, eye stalk; exn, exopod (n); sn, sternite (n); Tn, thoracic exopod (n); tn, thoracic segment (n). Scale bars represent 20 mm.



SYSTEMATIC PALAEONTOLOGY

Phylum EUARTHROPODA Lankester, 1904

Unranked DEUTEROPODA Ortega-Hernández, 2016

Class, Order and Family incertae sedis

Genus OURA O’Flynn, Williams and Liu, new genus

Etymology. Gr. Oura, f. tail.

Remarks. Oura n. gen. is ascribed to Deuteropoda — as defined by a multi-segmented head and body arthrodization (Ortega-Hernández, 2016). Oura n. gen. bears: stalked, compound eyes, that is, a synapomorphy and symplesiomorphy of lower stem-group Euarthropoda and Deuteropoda, respectively (Ortega-Hernández, 2016, p. 11, table 4); and robust frontal appendages (FA, i.e., A1) that insert approximately one-half the length of the head behind the eye stalks and are inferred to be deutocerebral. The proximal-most three podomeres of the right-side frontal appendage (FA) are preserved, and these are morphologically like those of radiodonts and certain ‘great appendage’-bearing deuteropods.

Oura megale O’Flynn, Williams and Liu, new species
  
Etymology. Gr. Megale, large, great.

Diagnosis. Six cephalic segments. From anterior to posterior, these are: oblate spheroidal anterior sclerite to which large ovate paired stalked lateral eyes are attached; post-ocular segment with paired uniramous deutocerebral FAs; and four subsequent segments. FA antero-laterally orientated, consisting of ≥ three podomeres that bear elongate triangular spines. Thorax consists of 15 segments (anterior-most 10 comparatively long; posterior-most five comparatively short), each with one pair of presumed biramous appendages. Segment 15 articulated with large, ogival delta tailpiece.


Robert J. O’Flynn, Mark Williams, Ed Thomas, Xianguang Hou, and Yu Liu. 2025. Oura megale n. gen. n. sp., A large early Cambrian Deuteropod with a delta-shaped tailpiece. Palaeontologia Electronica. 28(3):a44. DOI: doi.org/10.26879/1547 
palaeo-electronica.org/content/2025/5687-early-cambrian-deuteropod-oura-megale
 x.com/PalaeoE/status/1977837034074210364

Plain Language Abstract:  Oura megale, a large arthropod (segmented, jointed-limbed animal), comparable in size to anomalocaridids (i.e., giant invertebrate Cambrian predators featuring mouthparts composed of a ring of plates), inhabited the Cambrian seas (approximately 518 million years ago) of south-western China. It had stalked eyes and a grasping frontal appendage, but in combination with a multi-segmented head, as we see in, for example, modern insects. Palaeontological techniques show a trunk that consists of 10 long and five short segments. The rearmost segment is associated with a large, delta-shaped tail that may have been conducive to efficient swimming. The evolutionary relationships between O. megale and other arthropods may suggest that the grasping appendage (shared by several arthropods) is inherited from a common ancestor.