Early Cambrian origin of modern food webs: evidence from predator arrow worms

Author:

Vannier J1,Steiner M2,Renvoisé E3,Hu S.-X4,Casanova J.-P5

Affiliation:

1. Université de Lyon, Université Lyon 1, UMR 5125 du CNRS ‘Paléoenvironnements et Paléobiosphère’Campus Scientifique de la Doua, Bâtiment Géode, 2, rue Raphaël Dubois, 69622 Villeurbanne, France

2. Technische Universität BerlinSekr. ACK 14, Ackerstrasse 71-76, 13355 Berlin, Germany

3. Université de Bourgogne, UMR Biogéosciences6, boulevard Gabriel, 21000 Dijon, France

4. Yunnan Institute of Geological Science131 Baita Road, 650011 Kunming, China

5. Université de Provence, ER ‘Biodiversité et Environnement’13331 Marseille, Cedex 3, France

Abstract

Although palaeontological evidence from exceptional biota demonstrates the existence of diverse marine communities in the Early Cambrian (approx. 540–520 Myr ago), little is known concerning the functioning of the marine ecosystem, especially its trophic structure and the full range of ecological niches colonized by the fauna. The presence of a diverse zooplankton in Early Cambrian oceans is still an open issue. Here we provide compelling evidence that chaetognaths, an important element of modern zooplankton, were present in the Early Cambrian Chengjiang biota with morphologies almost identical to Recent forms. New information obtained from the lowermost Cambrian of China added to previous studies provide convincing evidence that protoconodont-bearing animals also belonged to chaetognaths. Chaetognaths were probably widespread and diverse in the earliest Cambrian. The obvious raptorial function of their circumoral apparatuses (grasping spines) places them among the earliest active predator metazoans. Morphology, body ratios and distribution suggest that the ancestral chaetognaths were planktonic with possible ecological preferences for hyperbenthic niches close to the sea bottom. Our results point to the early introduction of prey–predator relationships into the pelagic realm, and to the increase of trophic complexity (three-level structure) during the Precambrian–Cambrian transition, thus laying the foundations of present-day marine food chains.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference54 articles.

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2. Azmi R. J. 1996 Evidence for soft tissue basal support in earliest Cambrian protoconodonts from the Lesser Himalaya: conodont function and affinity. In Contributions to the 15 th Indian Colloquium on Micropalaeontology and Stratigraphy Dehra Dun (ed. J. Pandey R. J. Azmi A. Bhandari & A. Dave) pp. 457–463. Dehra Dun India: Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology.

3. The structure of some Middle Cambrian conodonts, and the early evolution of conodont structure and function

4. The early history of the Conodonta;Bengtson S;Fossils and Strata,1983

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