Phylogeny and life habits of Early Arthropods—Predation in the Early Cambrian Sea*
- 1 February 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Progress in Natural Science: Materials International
- Vol. 14 (2) , 158-166
- https://doi.org/10.1080/10020070412331343301
Abstract
We investigated two new arthropods from the Maotianshan-Shale fauna of southern China in the course of our research on life strategies, particularly predation, in Early Cambrian marine macrofaunal biota. One form clearly belongs to the so-called “great-appendage” arthropods, animals that were, most likely, active predators catching prey with their first pair of large, specialized frontoventral appendages. Based on this, we hypothesize that the new species and many others, if not all of the “great-appendage” arthropods were derivatives of the chelicerate stem lineage and not forms having branched off at different nodes along the evolutionary lineage of the Arthropoda. Rather, we consider the “great-appendage” arthropods as belonging to a monophyletic clade, which modified autapomorphically their first pair of appendages (antennae in general arthropod terminology) into raptorial organs for food capture. The second new form resembles another Maotianshan-Shale arthropod. Fuxianhuia protensa, in sharing a head made of only two separate segments, a small segment bearing oval eyes laterally, and another bearing a large tergite, which forms a wide shield freely overhanging the subsequent narrow trunk segments. This segment bears a single pair of rather short anteriorly directed uniramous appendages, considered as the “still” limb-shaped antennae. Particularly the evolutionary status of head and limbs of these two formssuggests that both are representatives of the early part of the stem lineage toward the crown-group of Arthropoda, the Euarthropoda. These formsappear rather unspecialized, but may have been but simple predators. This adds to our hypothesis that predation was a common, if not dominant feeding strategy in the Cambrian, at least for arthropods.Keywords
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