Authors
Jean Vannier, Jianni Liu, Rudy Lerosey-Aubril, Jakob Vinther, Allison C Daley
Publication date
2014/5/2
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
5
Issue
1
Pages
3641
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Understanding the way in which animals diversified and radiated during their early evolutionary history remains one of the most captivating of scientific challenges. Integral to this is the ‘Cambrian explosion’, which records the rapid emergence of most animal phyla, and for which the triggering and accelerating factors, whether environmental or biological, are still unclear. Here we describe exceptionally well-preserved complex digestive organs in early arthropods from the early Cambrian of China and Greenland with functional similarities to certain modern crustaceans and trace these structures through the early evolutionary lineage of fossil arthropods. These digestive structures are assumed to have allowed for more efficient digestion and metabolism, promoting carnivory and macrophagy in early arthropods via predation or scavenging. This key innovation may have been of critical importance in the radiation and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Vannier, J Liu, R Lerosey-Aubril, J Vinther, AC Daley - Nature communications, 2014