Abstract
Cambrian annelids are strikingly diverse and reveal important details of annelid character acquisition. Their contribution, however, to a wider understanding of the evolution of the trochozoans (encompassing the annelids as well as such groups as the brachiopods and molluscs) remains limited. Thus the early annelids had been linked to a variety of cataphract Cambrian metazoans, notably Wiwaxia and the halkieriids, but recent work assigns such fossils to stem-group molluscs. Here we report two new annelids from the Lower Cambrian Chengjiang Lagerstätte, South China. Ipoliknus avitus n. gen., n. sp. is biramous with neurochaetae and notochaetae, but significantly also bears dorsal spinose sclerites and dorso-lateral dentate sclerites. Adelochaeta sinensis n. gen., n. sp. is unique amongst Cambrian polychaetes in possessing the rod-like supports of the parapodia known as aciculae. This supports phylogenetic placement of Adelochaeta as sister to some more derived aciculate Palaeozoic taxa, but in contrast Ipoliknus is recovered as the most basal of the stem-group annelids. Sclerites and chaetae of I. avitus are interpreted respectively as the remnants and derivatives of a once more extensive cataphract covering that was a characteristic of more primitive trochozoans. The two sets of chaetae (noto- and neurochaetae) and two sets of sclerites (spinose and dentate) suggest that in a pre-annelid an earlier and more complete scleritome may have consisted of four zones of sclerites. Other cataphract taxa from the Lower Palaeozoic show a variety of scleritome configurations but establishing direct links with such basal annelids as Ipoliknus at present must remain conjectural.
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Introduction
Along with the deuterostomes and ecdysozoans, the spiralians1,2 (that broadly encompass the lophotrochozoans3) are one of the three principal phylogenetic pillars of the Bilateria and are notable for a diversity of body plans. Many of the inter-relationships amongst the spiralians are still controversial, but following Kocot2 the lophotrochozoans can be broadly divided into the platyzoans (probably paraphyletic4) and the trochozoans (whose roster usually included the annelids, brachiopods, molluscs, nemerteans, and phoronids but less certainly one or other “polyzoan”). Amongst this latter assemblage, the phylum Annelida, and notably the paraphyletic assemblage of polychaetes, are important both in range of anatomical form and ecologies5. Yet many aspects of their evolution remain controversial. To some extent this applies to their internal relationships6,7,8,9,10, but much more so in terms of their origins and thus their possible connections to other trochozoan phyla. In this latter context most notable are the potential links to the brachiopods and molluscs. Thus, despite the growing roster of stem-group annelids11,12,13,14,15 that have been recorded from a number of Cambrian Fossil-Lagerstätten16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23, the connections of these disparate taxa to what have generally been identified as the most primitive of extant families6,7,8,9,10 are not obvious11. Moreover, thumb-nail sketches of the purported appearance of the ancestral annelid6,7,24 find few obvious counterparts amongst Cambrian polychaetes12, although here allowances need to be made for the potentially low fossilization potential of critical features25.
In attempting to establish the course of early trochozoan evolution, including possible links between the annelids and other phyla, various workers have looked to a variety of lower Palaeozoic sclerite-bearing (cataphract) metazoans26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37. In this regard key taxa include Calvapilosa28, Halkieria26,31 and related forms29, Orthrozanclus32,33, Oikozetetes34,37 and Wiwaxia21,27,35,36. The broad consensus remains (albeit with dissenting voices26,38) that these taxa are molluscan, and specifically should be assigned to stem-group aculiferans28,29,30,35,39. Nevertheless, the exact relationships between these taxa, as well as other scleritomic groups such as the tommotiids40,41,42,43,44,45, remain open to debate. For example, one reappraisal of Halkieria and Orthrozanclus confirms their close relationship but also contrary to the consensus argues for a relationship to the camenellan tommotiids33. More precise comparisons are somewhat frustrated because the latter group are effectively known only from disarticulated sclerites. Nevertheless, this proposed connection would in turn suggest that Halkieria and Orthrozanclus are phylogenetic neighbours of the trochozoan brachiopods and phoronids40,43,44 rather than the molluscs. The phylogenetic position of Wiwaxia has also been contested27,36, with conflicting interpretations including a relative proximity to either the annelids38 or molluscs, although the latter remains the current consensus28.
The various attempts to place these taxa in putative stem-groups also depend on which features could be plesiomorphic amongst two or more trochozoan phyla. Any such assignment in turn has implications for the likely mode of life of putative ancestors, not least style of feeding and relative motility1. It is likely, however, that whether sessile or motile (and if so possibly slug-like) the common ancestors of the annelids, brachiopods (plus phoronids), and molluscs possessed some sort of scleritome with a chitinous composition. If the descendant forms are any guide it is likely that this original scleritome consisted of several distinct zones. Subsequently as part of the trochozoan radiation into ultimately distinct phyla, this ur-scleritome underwent major changes in the distribution and morphology of the component sclerites, as well as in many cases subsequent and independent mineralization.
As a contribution to unravelling the early stages of trochozoan evolution, we describe a new polychaete, Ipoliknus avitus n. gen, n. sp. (Figs 1, 2, 4b), from the Lower Cambrian Chengjiang Lagerstätte of South China. In addition to its canonical notochaetae and neurochaetae, this worm also possesses dorsal and dorso-lateral sclerites. The discovery of this basal polychaete (Fig. 4a) indicates an evolutionary link of the annelids to at least some of the other sclerite-bearing trochozoans. In addition, from co-eval deposits we describe another polychaete, Adelochaeta sinensis n. gen., n. sp. (Fig. 3). This new taxon is apparently unique amongst Cambrian forms in its possession of internal cuticular rods known as aciculae. Amongst Palaeozoic polychaetes Adelochaeta is more derived and the presence of aciculae supports a position close to some other aciculate taxa (Fig. 4a) (although a somewhat more basal position is recovered using Bayesian analysis under a likelihood model of character evolution, Supplementary Information Fig. 3). Finally, three other specimens appear to be distinct from these two taxa but with the limited information available they remain in open nomenclature (Figs 5, 6).
Results
Systematic palaeontology. Superphylum Lophotrochozoa
Phylum Annelida Lamarck 180246.
Class Polychaeta Grube 185047.
Family Ipoliknidae n. fam.
Ipoliknus Han, Conway Morris and Shu 2019 n. gen.
Ipoliknus avitus Han, Conway Morris and Shu 2019 n. sp.
Remarks
A single specimen of a polychaete19 has been described from the nearby and slightly younger Guanshan Fossil-Lagerstätte, but with Ipoliknus, Adelochaeta, at least two forms in open nomenclature and possible sipunculans48 it is evident that despite their scarcity annelidan diversity in the Chengjiang Lagerstätte was notable and perhaps second only to the Burgess Shale16,21.
Etymology
Generic name from Greek for worm (ipos) and fan (liknos), latter with reference to prominent neurochaetae. Specific name from Latin for ancestral (avitus).
Diagnosis
Body centimetric, relatively broad (c. 1.5 mm), c. 50 segments, biramous parapodia. Neurochaetae prominent, c. 6 chaetae per bundle. Notochaetae massive. Dorsum bears two types of sclerites. Abaxially prominent elongate sclerites with dentate margin (c. 500 µm) while straddling midline an array of spinose sclerites (c. 150 µm). Head not known.
Type material
ELI-EC051A, B [1] (Figs 1a,b,d,e; 2), holotype; ELI-EC51 A, B [2–3] (Figs 1a,c,e; 2a,b), paratypes, all specimens comprise parts and counterparts, preserved in shale as a “pop-out”, weathered with abundant associated framboidal and more massive pyrite.
Provenance
Qiongzhusi (Chiungchussu) Formation, Yu’anshan Member (Eoredlichia zone), Cambrian (Series 2 (Stage 3)). All material is from the Ercai section, Haikou, Kunming, Yunnan province.
Family Adelochaetidae n. fam.
Adelochaeta Han, Conway Morris and Shu 2019
n. gen.
Adelochaeta sinensis Han, Conway Morris
and Shu 2019 n. sp.
Etymology
Generic name from Greek for faint or dim (adelos), referring to indistinctness of the chaetae. Specific name a reference to its Chinese location.
Diagnosis
Robust body (c. 18 mm), c. 20 segments. Narrow bundles of biramous chaetae, shorter posteriorly.
Holotype
ELI-J1050 A, B (Fig. 3).
Provenance
Qiongzhusi (Chiungchussu) Formation, Yu’anshan Member (Eoredlichia zone), Cambrian (Series 2 (Stage 3)). Material is from the Jianshan section, Haikou, Kunming, Yunnan province.
Descriptions
Material is rare, consisting of a single specimen of Adelochaeta and four of Ipoliknus. The latter is an association that shows sub-parallel arrangement and partial overlap (Figs 1a; 2a,b)), an orientation most likely the result of current activity. All specimens show a preservation typical of the Chengjiang Lagerstätte25,48. Some regions of the body in Ipoliknus (notably chaetae and sclerites) are pyritized. Now oxidized, the relict framboids occur as both scattered patches on the trunk and more particularly concentrated along the sclerites, chaetae and associated parapodia (Fig. 2c). Elemental analyses of Ipoliknus confirm the abundance of iron, but other major elements are not enhanced (Supplementary Information Fig. 1).
Ipoliknus (Fig. 4b) has a relatively broad trunk, composed of c. 50 segments, with biramous parapodia (Figs 1b,d,e; 2a,b). Neurochaetae are prominent, each forming a fan of c. 6 chaetae that project more or less at right angles from the body. Each chaetal fascicle converges on a capsule-like structure (Figs 1b,d; 2b). Notochaetae are massive, arranged sub-parallel to the longitudinal axis (Figs 1d,e; 2b,c). Neither head nor pygidium is visible. Segment boundaries are evident (Fig. 1c,e), but there is no direct evidence for internal anatomy.
Ipoliknus is noteworthy for its two sets of cuticular structures (Fig. 1c,e–f). Abaxial to the midline are gently arcuate sclerites (c. 500 µm), separated by narrow zones of cuticle. Some possess a prominent dentation, but intervening sclerites may have lacked denticles. The other type of sclerite occupies the dorsum and is represented by large numbers of small sclerites (c. 10 µm long). Each sclerite has a relatively broad base and an even degree of taper. They lie oblique to the longitudinal axis of the trunk, converging on the midline. Given that both these sclerite types show the same sort of preservation as the chaetae, most likely they also were composed of chitin.
Adelochaeta differs in many respects from Ipoliknus. The former (Fig. 3) is characterized by a broad and smooth trunk, consisting of c. 20 segments. A defined head is relatively large but yields no information on possible palps/antennae or jaws. Arising from the body the notochaetae appear to have been short and relatively few in each fascicle. The neurochaetae are thin, forming posteriorly directed narrow bundles. Adaxial to the chaetae are internal elongate rod-like structures (Fig. 3c–e). In common with the chaetae they are not particularly well preserved, but are clearly distinguished from the adjacent body. Their location is consistent with them being equivalent to the aciculae that characterize some, but not all, crown group polychaetes. An alimentary canal is also preserved.
Other polychaetes
In addition to these two new polychaetes three additional specimens are available (Figs 5, 6, Supplementary Information Fig. 2). Whilst similar to Ipoliknus, the chaetae in these specimens are conspicuously longer and they may represent at least two new taxa. ELI-JS044 (Fig. 5; Supplementary Information Fig. 2) has a straight orientation and shows 14 segments. ELI-EJ050 (Fig. 6a–c) is quite tightly coiled; such a disposition could have resulted from pre-mortem stress. ELI-CJ181 (Fig. 6d–f) is incomplete, displays 11 segments, lacks the anterior but shows evidence for the pygidium, albeit without evidence for cirri or other extensions. In all these specimens the elongate chaetae are probably the neurochaetae, while in ELI-JS044 also visible is a fan of finer notochaetae subparallel to the body (Fig. 5b–e). In contrast specimen ELI-CJ181 (Fig. 6d–f) shows more elongate notochaetae, sub-parallel to the neurochaetae. The only detail of the internal anatomy is a gut trace in ELI-CJ181. Pyritization is extensive in ELI-JS044, and although there is a relative enrichment in copper, its coincidence with the iron (Supplementary Information Fig. 2) suggests an association with the iron pyrites (as a chalcopyrite).
Evolutionary relationships
Recent phylogenetic analyses of the annelids6,7,8,9,10 have been augmented by those that include a variety of fossil taxa12,14,15. These new phylogenies14,15 represent important advances, but indicate comparatively little morphological character overlap between extant species and Cambrian fossil taxa, which generally preserve far fewer soft-tissue or micro-scale characters. Because of the recognition of sclerites in Ipoliknus our principal aim here is to place these new fossils in the context of early annelid evolution. Accordingly our main analysis (Fig. 4a) encompasses Adelochaeta and Ipoliknus as well as those fossil taxa previously considered14,15.
This analysis results in a well-resolved phylogeny that is broadly congruent with the most recently published phylogeny15. A parallel Bayesian phylogenetic analysis recovers a broadly similar topology (Supplementary Information Fig. 3), although Adelochaeta is recovered in a somewhat more basal position within the annelids. With the tentative exception of Guanshanchaeta (ref.19, Fig. 2c), Adelochaeta is evidently unique amongst Cambrian polychaetes in possessing aciculae (Fig. 3c–e). In the most parsimonious phylogenies (Fig. 4a) this genus is sister to some more derived taxa from the later Palaeozoic. Aciculae are taken as a key character in the eponymous Aciculata5,12,14, and this could support such a placement for Adelochaeta. Nevertheless, given the paucity of available character states caution is necessary and the presence of aciculae in Adelochaeta may be convergent. Support for this possibility comes from the scattered occurrences of aciculae in such groups as the psammodrilids and apistobranchids5 that phylogenetically lie well aside the Aciculata. In terms of our proposed phylogeny the Sirius Passet Lagerstätte Phragmochaeta17 remains near basal14. Most significantly, however, Ipoliknus is revealed to be basal-most of the annelids and here the sclerites seem to be of particular note. Apart from possibly similar structures that sometimes co-occur with the disarticulated chaetae in the lower Cambrian Baltichaeta22, these sclerites find no counterpart in the integuments of any other fossil or extant polychaete. In particular, although a number of annelids bear dense fields of recurved chaetae49 these are of neuropodial origin and unrelated to the sclerites of Ipoliknus. So too, it is important to emphasize that these sclerites are quite distinct from the calcitic plates of the geologically younger machaeridian annelids12,50, be it in terms of composition, distribution and mode of growth. Given, therefore, that within the annelids these sclerites are unique to Ipoliknus, there would appear to be broadly two alternatives. The first is that they are an example of evolutionary convergence. An alternative view, consistent with the basal-most phylogenetic position of Ipoliknus (Fig. 4a), is that these structures are the remnants of a once more complete cuticular coating that otherwise characterized more primitive cataphract trochozoans.
The recognition of an annelid with a scleritome invites brief consideration of the possible significance of Ipoliknus in the wider schema of metazoan evolution, specifically the Trochozoa which form an apparently monophyletic assemblage within the larger Lophotrochozoa3,51. So far as the trochozoans are concerned this group includes annelids, as well as brachiopods, molluscs, nemerteans and phoronids. Other phyla are sometimes included but are not of immediate relevance to our observations. Amongst the principal trochozoan phyla there are a variety of rival groupings, but there is generally strong support for brachiopods and phoronids being a sister-group (and with a possible further link to the nemerteans52), and some evidence that they in turn may be related to an annelid-mollusc clade. The marked disparity of these phyla and a scarcity of synapomophies (or alternatively character states that exhibit contradictory distributions amongst the various groups) means that the fossil record is best placed to provide potential information on transitional forms. In this context a diversity of taxa possessing various types of scleritome (albeit with the curious exception of Odontogriphus39) have been a focus of attention as candidate stem-groups for one or other of the trochozoan phyla. Notable in this respect are the Cambrian taxa Wiwaxia21,27,35,36,39, Halkieria26,31, Orthrozanclus32,33, Oikozetetes34,37, Sinosachites29, and from the Ordovician Calvapilosa28. The relationships of these taxa, both with respect to each other and also more widely, are not fully resolved33,38,53. Currently most, if not all, are regarded as early molluscs30,53, specifically stem-group aculiferans that broadly pre-figure a polyplacophoran-like arrangement28,35. More recently, however, a description33 of a new orthrozanclid (O. elongata from the Chengjiang Lagerstätte) has questioned this consensus, albeit without the benefit of a cladistic analysis. In this reinterpretation Orthrozanclus and Halkieria are confirmed to be closely related32, but this analysis rejects a close connection between these two taxa and the wiwaxiids. It does, however, argue for a close affinity between these halkieriids and a group of tommotiids known as the camenellans45. This latter group has in turn been convincingly linked, by forms such as Micrina and Eccenthrotheca, to the brachiopods and phoronids40,41,42,43,44. In this new formulation, Wiwaxia would be moved more basal-wards and so could be re-interpreted as a stem-group trochozoan27,38,54.
In discussions of the nature of the early trochozoans a key feature concerns the chitinous chaetae. Best known in the annelids and brachiopods55, they find occasional counterparts elsewhere amongst the trochozoans. Amongst fossil material, one notable example concerns the coiled shell Pelagiella56 which is evidently a mollusc but of uncertain position. Amongst extant molluscs chaetae are known in some juvenile octopods57. Employment of narrow cellular extensions, the microvilli, for the secretion of not only these various sorts of chaetae but also other types of sclerites is interpreted as a plesiomorphy of the Trochozoa21,27, although these fundamental homologies may be less obvious given the variety of sclerite form, such as their being hollow or mineralized35. So too the details of scleritome configuration show wide variation, even in apparently quite closely related taxa. Thus although Halkieria and Orthrozanclus are both assigned to the Halkieriidae32,33, comparisons between their scleritomes reveal important and intriguing differences. In these two taxa not only are there respectively two and one terminal shells, but the shared tripartite arrangement of the sclerite zones (basal, mid, upper) is such that the basal-zone sclerites in Orthrozanclus are strikingly similar in terms of morphology and orientation to those of the mid-zone in Halkieria33. This otherwise unremarked mosaicism and the possibility that various microstructures within the sclerites could be convergent53 suggest that the details of early trochozoan evolution may require further discoveries.
In this context it is important to note that the sclerites of Ipoliknus find no exact counterpart amongst other known trochozoans in terms of their specific shape. Nevertheless the description of this new annelid allows for two potentially important observations. First, given the preservation of the sclerites is identical to the adjacent chaetae this suggests that they too were not only chitinous but presumably also microvillous in their construction. By implication both chaetae and sclerites would be homologous with the various types of sclerites that characterize a number of other trochozoans. Second is the observation that the sclerites on the dorsal surface of Ipoliknus are arranged in two zones (Fig. 1e,f), while adaxially there are two zones of chaetae (neurochaetae and notochaetae, Fig. 1d). This hints that forms ancestral to Ipoliknus may not only have had a scleritome58, but one composed of four distinct zones.
If there was such a sclerite configuration, then in the lineage that led to the annelids the two ventro-lateral zones would have ultimately given rise to the biramous arrangement of neurochaetae and notochaetae. These were deployed respectively as locomotory units and a more dorsal thatch-like arrangement that conferred protection14,24,26. In an already widely accepted scenario6,11,24 the transition to a fully fledged annelidan body plan58 was driven by (a) enhanced motility and, in combination with a body undulation, the development of a stepping pattern of metachronal levers (the parapodia and neurochaetae acting as points d’appui) and (b) in post-Ipoliknus forms (Fig. 3a) the loss of the two zones of dorsal sclerites with any protective role being now adopted by the notochaetae13,17.
Conclusion
The Ediacaran taxon Kimberella59 has been regarded as a mollusc30, but has been alternatively placed as a more basal trochozoan60. In any event, along with the other bilaterians this group was probably beginning to diversify in the latest Proterozoic60. It is possible, however, that the principal radiations of trochozoans were an integral part of the Cambrian “explosion”. This expansion led not only to a remarkable diversity of animal forms, including the exceptional disparity seen amongst the Cambrian annelids. In this respect the range of taxa encompasses both the sclerite-bearing Ipoliknus and apparently aciculate Adelochaeta, as well as such taxa as different as Phragmochaeta, Insolicorypha and Canadia12,16,17,21. In passing, it may be worth noting that this latter taxon not only has especially well developed notochaetae and neurochaetae but also an inter-ramal gill that is intriguingly reminiscent of the molluscan ctenidia16. Such evolutionary mosaicism is an integral (if unduly neglected) feature of all adaptive radiations and also a reminder that the anatomical and genomic differences amongst the stem-group trochozoans that shortly led to groups as disparate as the annelids and molluscs would have been minimal. So too the sclerites of Ipoliknus point to links to other sclerite-bearing taxa, but the unravelling of this complex history must await new discoveries amongst the Cambrian Fossil-Lagerstätten.
Methods
Specimens were observed using a binocular microscope Leica M80 complemented with interpretative camera-lucida drawings. Photographs were taken using a Canon 5D Mark III. Energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) analysis and back-scatter electron (BSE) imagery without coating were conducted on an environmental scanning electron microscope (SEM) of FEI Quanta 400 FEG under low vacuum and 20 kv with an EDS system at the State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics, Northwest University, China.
Data Availability
Specimens are accessioned in the Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Early Life and Environment, Northwest University, Xi’an.
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Acknowledgements
Supported by the Strategic Priority Research Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences (Grant No. XDB26000000), Natural Science Foundation of China (Nos 41672009, 41621003, 41772010, 41720104002) and Ministry of Science and 111 project of Ministry of Education of China (No. D17013) (D.G.S., J.H.), Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, St. John’s College, Cambridge (S.C.M.) and Earth-Life Science Institute, Japan (supported by a grant from the John Templeton Foundation, J.H.C.). Anonymous reviewers made numerous and cogent suggestions for improvements to our paper. We also thank V. Brown for manuscript preparation and N.J. Butterfield for invaluable comments, as well as H.-J. Gong and J. Sun for technical assistance with the SEM spectroscopy.
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The project was conceived by J.H. and S.C.M. S.C.M. wrote early drafts of the paper, and all authors contributed subsequently. J.H. prepared all illustrative material, and J.H.C. undertook the phylogenetic analysis. All authors discussed results, and developed the final conclusions.
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Han, J., Conway Morris, S., Hoyal Cuthill, J.F. et al. Sclerite-bearing annelids from the lower Cambrian of South China. Sci Rep 9, 4955 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-40841-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-40841-x
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