Unusual 'Tulip' Creature discovered: lived in the ocean over 500
million years ago
21 Jan ScienceDaily
A bizarre creature that lived in the ocean more than 500 million
years ago has emerged from the famous Middle Cambrian Burgess Shale in
the Canadian Rockies.
Officially named Siphusauctum gregarium, fossils reveal a
tulip-shaped creature that is about the length of a dinner knife
(approximately 20 centimetres) and has a unique filter feeding system.
Siphusauctum has a long stem, with a calyx a bulbous cup-like structure
near the top that encloses an unusual filter feeding system and a gut.
The animal is thought to have fed by filtering particles from water
actively pumped into its calyx through small holes. The stem ends with a
small disc which anchored the animal to the seafloor. Siphusauctum lived
in large clusters, as indicated by slabs containing over 65 individual
specimens.
Lorna O'Brien, a PhD candidate in the Department of Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology at the University of Toronto and her supervisor,
adjunct professor Jean Bernard Caron, curator of invertebrate
palaeontology at the Royal Ontario Museum, reported on the discovery
Jan. 18 in the online science journal PLoS ONE. "Most interesting is
that this feeding system appears to be unique among animals. Recent
advances have linked many bizarre Burgess Shale animals as primitive
members of many animal groups that are found today, but Siphusauctum
defies this trend.
We do not know where it fits in relation to other organisms," said
lead author O'Brien. "Our description is based on more than 1,100 fossil
specimens from a new Burgess Shale locality that has been nicknamed the
Tulip Beds," she added. Located in Yoho National Park, British Columbia,
the Tulip Beds were first discovered in 1983 by the Royal Ontario
Museum. They are located high on Mount Stephen, overlooking the town of
Field.
Like the rest of the Burgess Shale, the beds represent rock layers
with exceptional preservation of mostly soft-bodied organisms. The
Burgess Shale, protected under the larger Rocky Mountain Parks UNESCO
World Heritage site and managed by Parks Canada, preserves fossil
evidence of some of the earliest complex animals that lived in the
oceans of our planet nearly 505 million years ago. The discovery of
Siphusauctum expands the range of animal diversity that existed during
this time period.
|