A tardigrade in Dominican amber

Author:

Mapalo Marc A.1ORCID,Robin Ninon2ORCID,Boudinot Brendon E.34ORCID,Ortega-Hernández Javier1ORCID,Barden Phillip56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Museum of Comparative Zoology, Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA

2. Directorate Earth and History of Life, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels, Belgium

3. Institut für Spezielle Zoologie und Evolutionsforschung, Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena, Jena, Germany

4. University of California, Davis, Department of Entomology, One Shields Avenue, Davis 94596, CA, USA

5. Department of Biological Sciences, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Newark, USA

6. Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, New York City, USA

Abstract

Tardigrades are a diverse group of charismatic microscopic invertebrates that are best known for their ability to survive extreme conditions. Despite their long evolutionary history and global distribution in both aquatic and terrestrial environments, the tardigrade fossil record is exceedingly sparse. Molecular clocks estimate that tardigrades diverged from other panarthropod lineages before the Cambrian, but only two definitive crown-group representatives have been described to date, both from Cretaceous fossil deposits in North America. Here, we report a third fossil tardigrade from Miocene age Dominican amber. Paradoryphoribius chronocaribbeus gen. et sp. nov. is the first unambiguous fossil representative of the diverse superfamily Isohypsibioidea, as well as the first tardigrade fossil described from the Cenozoic. We propose that the patchy tardigrade fossil record can be explained by the preferential preservation of these microinvertebrates as amber inclusions, coupled with the scarcity of fossiliferous amber deposits before the Cretaceous.

Funder

New Jersey Institute of Technology

Harvard FAS Division of Science

Wetmore Colles Fund

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

Reference55 articles.

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3. Bertolani R, Grimaldi D. 2000 A new eutardigrade (Tardigrada: Milnesiidae) in amber from the Upper Cretaceous (Turonian) of New Jersey. In Studies on fossils in amber, with particular reference to the Cretaceous of New Jersey (ed. D Grimaldi), pp. 103-110. Leiden, The Netherlands: Backhuys.

4. 'Orsten' type phosphatized soft-integument preservation and a new record from the Middle Cambrian Kuonamka Formation in Siberia

5. Cambrian Derivatives of the Early Arthropod Stem Lineage, Pentastomids, Tardigrades and Lobopodians An ‘Orsten’ Perspective

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