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Published September 2009 | public
Journal Article

Phase contrast synchrotron X-ray microtomography of Ediacaran (Doushantuo) metazoan microfossils: Phylogenetic diversity and evolutionary implications

Abstract

Microfossils from the Ediacaran Weng'an Phosphate Member of the Doushantuo Formation (Guizhou Province, southern China) have received widespread attention. The Doushantuo, which overlies the glacial deposits of the Nantuo Formation, was deposited following the Marinoan glaciation, the last extensive glaciation of Snowball Earth. Radiometric age dating indicates that the Doushantuo is older than 580 my, and hence that these microfossils are older than the Ediacara Biota. However, the diversity represented by these fossils has yet to be fully documented. A recent technological approach that has increasingly been used to image fossils, propagation phase contrast synchrotron X-ray microtomography, has allowed non-destructive study of both exterior and interior features of a variety of Doushantuo microfossils from the gray facies of the Weng'an Phosphate Member, cropping out along the axis of the Mt. Beidou anticline. Studies of Doushantuo embryos demonstrate the existence of a large suite of modern embryonic features, including macromeres and micromeres, cell lineage, polar lobes, compacted epithelia, equal and unequal cleavage, blastulation and gastrulation, and chorionic protection. Because embryos such as those here studied provide only a limited amount of phylogenetic information, and because adult metazoans of the types that produced these embryos have yet to be discovered in Doushantuo-age rocks, these fossilized embryonic forms can at present be assigned only to the various superclades represented amongst living Metazoa. The diversity of the embryos here studied suggests that the metazoan fauna of the Doushantuo may well have included animals of poriferan, cnidarian, and both protostomial (representatives possibly of basal protostome lineages) and deuterostomial affinity. If this interpretation is correct, it would then follow that the last common ancestor of the bilaterian metazoan lineage, as well as the last common ancestor of sponges, cnidarians and bilaterians, pre-dated deposition of the Doushantuo strata.

Additional Information

Copyright © 2009 Elsevier. Received 19 September 2008; revised 1 April 2009; accepted 9 April 2009. Available online 4 May 2009. This research was supported by Chinese Academy of Science Grant KZCX3-SW-14; National Basic Research Program of China (Grants 2007CB815800, 2006CB806400); National Science Foundation of China (Grants 40432006, 40772001); 111 Project and 985-2 Project of Nanjing University; NASA/Ames grant NAG2-1541; and the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility. CJY acknowledges grant support from Caltech through the Gordon and Betty Moore Distinguished Scholar Program. GL was supported by National Science Foundation of China (Grant 10675140) and FG by the Camilla Chandler Frost Fellowship at Caltech. We thank Marty Shankland (University of Texas, Austin) for valuable discussions and identification of yolk platelets. Bill Schopf, Shuhai Xiao and an anonymous reviewer provided valuable suggestions for improvement of an earlier version of this manuscript.

Additional details

Created:
August 21, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023