Multiple origins of dorsal ecdysial sutures in trilobites and their relatives

Author:

Du Kun-sheng12ORCID,Guo Jin23,Losso Sarah R4,Pates Stephen56,Li Ming7,Chen Ai-lin18

Affiliation:

1. Research Center of Paleobiology, Yuxi Normal University

2. Key Laboratory for Palaeobiology and MEC International Joint Laboratory for Palaeoenvironment, Institute of Palaeontology, Yunnan University

3. Management Committee of the Chengjiang Fossil Site World Heritage

4. Museum of Comparative Zoology and Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University

5. Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter

6. Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge

7. Institute of Geology, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences

8. State Key Laboratory of Palaeobiology and Stratigraphy, Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology

Abstract

Euarthropods are an extremely diverse phylum in the modern, and have been since their origination in the early Palaeozoic. They grow through moulting the exoskeleton (ecdysis) facilitated by breaking along lines of weakness (sutures). Artiopodans, a group that includes trilobites and their non-biomineralizing relatives, dominated arthropod diversity in benthic communities during the Palaeozoic. Most trilobites – a hyperdiverse group of tens of thousands of species - moult by breaking the exoskeleton along cephalic sutures, a strategy that has contributed to their high diversity during the Palaeozoic. However, the recent description of similar sutures in early diverging non-trilobite artiopodans mean that it is unclear whether these sutures evolved deep within Artiopoda, or convergently appeared multiple times within the group. Here we describe new well-preserved material of Acanthomeridion , a putative early diverging artiopodan, including hitherto unknown details of its ventral anatomy and appendages revealed through CT scanning, highlighting additional possible homologous features between the ventral plates of this taxon and trilobite free cheeks. We used three coding strategies treating ventral plates as homologous to trilobite free cheeks, to trilobite cephalic doublure, or independently derived. If ventral plates are considered homologous to free cheeks, Acanthomeridion is recovered sister to trilobites however dorsal ecdysial sutures are still recovered at many places within Artiopoda. If ventral plates are considered homologous to doublure or non-homologous, then Acanthomeridion is not recovered as sister to trilobites, and thus the ventral plates represent a distinct feature to trilobite doublure/free cheeks.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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