Silurian freshwater arthropod from northwest China

Author:

Zong Ruiwen1ORCID,Edgecombe Gregory D.2,Liu Bingcai34,Wang Yi3,Yin Jiayi5,Ma Juan1,Xu Honghe3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Biogeology & Environmental Geology China University of Geosciences Wuhan 430074 China

2. Natural History Museum Cromwell Road London SW7 5BD UK

3. State Key Laboratory of Palaeobiology & Stratigraphy, Nanjing Institute of Geology & Palaeontology and Center for Excellence in Life & Palaeoenvironment Chinese Academy of Sciences Nanjing 210008 China

4. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100046 China

5. School of Earth Sciences China University of Geosciences Wuhan 430074 China

Abstract

AbstractAnimals breaking away from the sea was a revolutionary event in the evolution of life. Arthropods were the earliest metazoans to move onto land, and although a few Silurian freshwater and/or terrestrial arthropods have been found so far, these records are all from Laurussia. Here, we describe a new freshwater arthropod, Maldybulakia saierensis sp. nov., from the western Junggar, northwest China. Evidence from co‐occurring spores and body fossils of plants is presented in support of a Silurian (Pridoli) age for this new Maldybulakia species, alongside palaeosalinity data in support of our interpretation of it having lived in a freshwater environment. The discovery of this species brings forward the earliest appearance of the Maldybulakia, previously known from the Devonian of Kazakhstan and eastern Australia, to the late Silurian. It is the oldest body fossil record of a putatively freshwater arthropod outside Laurussia, and greatly expands their palaeogeographical distribution. In the middle and late Silurian, the discovery of freshwater arthropods on multiple plates/terranes, as well as their morphological diversity during this period, suggests that arthropods had left the marine environment by the early Silurian or even earlier.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Paleontology

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