Fossil evidence for the ancient link between clonal fragmentation, six-fold symmetry and an epizoic lifestyle in asterozoan echinoderms

Author:

Thuy Ben1ORCID,Numberger-Thuy Lea D.12,Härer Jürgen3,Kroh Andreas4,Winkler Viola4,Schweigert Günter5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Palaeontology, Natural History Museum Luxembourg, 25 rue Münster, 2160 Luxembourg

2. Dinosaurierpark Teufelsschlucht, Ferschweilerstrasse 50, Ernzen, 54668 Germany

3. Roennebergstraße 5, Berlin 12161, Germany

4. Naturhistorisches Museum, Burgring 7 Vienna 1010, Austria

5. Palaeontology Department, State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart, Rosenstein 1 Stuttgart 70191, Germany

Abstract

Asexual reproduction by means of splitting, also called fissiparity, is a common feature in some asterozoan groups, especially in ophiactid brittle stars. Most fissiparous brittle stars show six instead of the usual five rays, live as epibionts on host organisms, and use clonal fragmentation to rapidly colonize secluded habitats and effectively expand the margins of their distribution area. While the biology and ecology of clonal fragmentation are comparatively well understood, virtually nothing is known about the evolution and geological history of that phenomenon. Here, we describe an exceptional fossil of an articulated six-armed brittle star from the Late Jurassic of Germany, showing one body half in the process of regeneration, and assign it to the new species Ophiactis hex sp. nov. Phylogenetic inference shows that the fossil represents the oldest member of the extant family Ophiactidae. Because the Ophiactis hex specimen shows an original six-fold symmetry combined with a morphology typically found in epizoic ophiuroids, in line with recent fissiparous ophiactid relatives, we assume that the regenerating body half is an indication for fissiparity. Ophiactis hex thus shows that fissiparity was established as a means of asexual reproduction in asterozoan echinoderms by the Late Jurassic.

Funder

NHMW

Publisher

The Royal Society

Reference41 articles.

1. Reproduction by Fragmentation in Corals

2. Environmental factors influencing asexual reproductive processes in echinoderms;Mladenov PV;Oceanol. Acta,1996

3. Variable symmetry in fissiparous Asterozoa;Clark AM;Symp. Zool. Soc.,1967

4. Asterina burtoni (Asteroidea; Echinodermata) in the Mediterranean and the Red Sea: does asexual reproduction enhance colonization?

5. Stöhr S O'Hara T. ThuyB (eds). 2023 Ophiuroidea. See https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=123084.

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