Postcranial disparity of galeaspids and the evolution of swimming speeds in stem-gnathostomes

Author:

Gai Zhikun12ORCID,Lin Xianghong1,Shan Xianren12,Ferrón Humberto G34,Donoghue Philip C J3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100044 , China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100049 , China

3. Bristol Palaeobiology Group, School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol , Bristol BS8 1TH , UK

4. Instituto Cavanilles de Biodiversidad i Biología Evolutiva, Universitat de València , Paterna 46980 , Valencia , Spain

Abstract

AbstractGaleaspids are extinct jawless relatives of living jawed vertebrates whose contribution to understanding the evolutionary assembly of the gnathostome bodyplan has been limited by absence of postcranial remains. Here, we describe Foxaspis novemura gen. et sp. nov., based on complete articulated remains from a newly discovered Konservat-Lagerstätte in the Early Devonian (Pragian, ∼410 Ma) of Guangxi, South China. F. novemura had a broad, circular dorso-ventrally compressed headshield, slender trunk and strongly asymmetrical hypochordal tail fin comprised of nine ray-like scale-covered digitations. This tail morphology contrasts with the symmetrical hypochordal tail fin of Tujiaaspis vividus, evidencing disparity in galeaspid postcranial anatomy. Analysis of swimming speed reveals galeaspids as moderately fast swimmers, capable of achieving greater cruising swimming speeds than their more derived jawless and jawed relatives. Our analyses reject the hypothesis of a driven trend towards increasingly active food acquisition which has been invoked to characterize early vertebrate evolution.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Leverhulme Trust

European Union

Natural Environment Research Council

Biosphere Evolution, Transitions and Resilience

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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5. Early Vertebrates

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