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Post Info TOPIC: Arthropods


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RE: Arthropods
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Ancestor of arthropods had the mouth of a penis worm

Fresh evidence from a series of expeditions to North Greenland have led palaeontologists to solve an age-old mystery about a distinctive group of arthropods.
Imagine a meter long worm with 12 stubby legs and matching sets of flaps running down the body. On the head is a large pair of spiny appendages used for grasping prey that transport victims into a circular mouth with several rows of teeth. For years, scientists have disagreed over whether this mouth belonged to the Anomalocaris, the largest sea predator from the Cambrian Period, or was comparable to the penis worm, a subset of priapulids, a category of marine worms that were diverse in the Cambrian.

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Yawunik kootenayi
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New lobster-like predator found in 508 million-year-old fossil-rich site

A newly identified species called Yawunik kootenayi, a marine creature with two pairs of eyes and prominent grasping appendages that lived as much as 508 million years ago - more than 250 million years before the first dinosaur.
The fossil was identified by an international team led by palaeontologists at the University of Toronto (U of T) and the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) in Toronto, as well as Pomona College in California. It is the first new species to be described from the Marble Canyon site, part of the renowned Canadian Burgess Shale fossil deposit.

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Aegirocassis benmoulae
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Human-sized lobster-like animal roamed ancient seas

A two metre long lobster-like animal that lived 480 million years ago used spine-covered 'limbs' on its head to catch food, fossils have revealed.
The new species, named Aegirocassis benmoulae after the Moroccan fossil hunter Mohamed Ben Moula who discovered the remains, also had paired swimming flaps along its body

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'Giant lobster' ate like a whale

Scientists have discovered a bizarre human-sized lobster ancestor that lived 480 million years ago.
The monster used spiny "limbs" on its head to sift food from the ocean.
It also had pairs of fins along both sides of its 2m-long body, which are precursors of the double limbs seen in many of its living relatives.

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When Trilobites Ruled the World

In a series of recent reports, scientists describe fresh insights into the trilobite's crystal-eyed visual system, unique in the animal kingdom, and its distinctive body plan, a hashtag of horizontal segments arrayed along three vertical lobes that allowed the trilobite to roll up into a defensive ball against predators and sea squalls.
Other researchers have found evidence that some trilobites were highly social, migrating long distances in a head-to-tail procession as they searched for food, or gathering together during molting season at a kind of Trilo's Retreat, where the trilobites could simultaneously shuck off their carapaces and seek out mates.

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megacheiran Alalcomenaeus
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A team of researchers led by University of Arizona Regents' Professor Nick Strausfeld and London Natural History Museum's Greg Edgecombe have discovered the earliest known complete nervous system, exquisitely preserved in the fossilised remains of a never-before described creature that crawled or swam in the ocean 520 million years ago.
The find suggests that the ancestors of chelicerates - spiders, scorpions and their kin - branched off from the family tree of other arthropods - including insects, crustaceans and millipedes - more than half a billion years ago.

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Title: Demecology in the Cambrian -- synchronised molting in arthropods from the Burgess Shale
Authors: Joachim T Haug, Jean-Bernard Caron and Carolin Haug

Background
The Burgess Shale is well known for its preservation of a diverse soft-bodied biota dating from the Cambrian period (Series 3, Stage 5). While previous paleoecological studies have focused on particular species (autecology) or entire paleocommunities (synecology), studies on the ecology of populations (= demecology) of Burgess Shale organisms have remained mainly anecdotal.

Results
Here, we present evidence for mass molting events in two unrelated arthropods from the Burgess Shale Walcott Quarry, Canadaspis perfecta and a megacheiran referred to as Alalcomenaeus sp.

Conclusions
These findings suggest that the triggers for such supposed synchronised molting appeared early on during the Cambrian radiation, and synchronised molting in the Cambrian may have had similar functions in the past as it does today. In addition, the finding of numerous juvenile Alalcomenaeus sp. molts associated with the putative alga Dictyophycus suggests a possible nursery habitat. In this nursery habitat a population of this animal might have found a more protected environment in which to spend critical developmental phases, as do many modern species today.

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Fuxianhuiid arthropods
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Feeding limbs and nervous system of one of Earth's earliest animals discovered

An extraordinary find allowing scientists to see through the head of the 'fuxianhuiid' arthropod has revealed one of the earliest evolutionary examples of limbs used for feeding, along with the oldest nervous system to stretch beyond the head in fossil record.
Until now, all fossils found of this extremely early soft-bodied animal featured heads covered by a wide shell or 'carapace', obscuring underlying contents from detailed study.
 
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Complex Brains
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Cambrian Fossil Pushes Back Evolution of Complex Brains

The remarkably well-preserved fossil of an extinct arthropod shows that anatomically complex brains evolved earlier than previously thought and have changed little over the course of evolution. According to University of Arizona neurobiologist Nicholas Strausfeld, who co-authored the study describing the specimen, the fossil is the earliest known to show a brain.
The discovery will be published in the Oct. 11 issue of the journal Nature.
Embedded in mudstones deposited during the Cambrian period 520 million years ago in what today is the Yunnan Province in China, the approximately 3-inch-long fossil, which belongs to the species Fuxianhuia protensa, represents an extinct lineage of arthropods combining an advanced brain anatomy with a primitive body plan.

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'Smallest fossil' scanned by University of Manchester

An X-ray scan of Baltic amber at the University of Manchester has revealed what scientists have said is the "smallest arthropod fossil ever".
The 50 million-year-old mite, which was found on a fossilised spider, is just 170 millionths of a millimetre long.
The find, published in the Royal Society's Biology Letters, was made using computed tomography (CT) which builds up a 3-D image from flat images.

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