It is estimated that the evolution of segmented bilaterians occurred during the Ediacaran, whereas most of their unambiguous body fossils did not appear until Cambrian Stage 3. This fossil gap hampers our understanding of the early history of body segmentation, which is a crucial evolutionary innovation for bilaterians. Trace fossils from the late Ediacaran and basal Cambrian suggest this gap is likely to represent a taphonomic bias, implying that the progenitors of segmented bilaterians that existed within this temporal span were hardly preserved. Here, we report a variety of segmented bilaterians from the lowermost Cambrian of South China. These fossils are preserved as microbial pseudomorphs, rather than as ordinary phosphatization. These findings demonstrate that microbial pseudomorphs represent a major pathway for the preservation of segmented bilaterians during this period, as well as an effective mechanism for overcoming the taphonomic bias that affects micro-animals with delicate, non-biomineralized bodies. Moreover, the newly described animals, among the earliest segmented bilaterians, reveal a high diversity of segmented bilaterians during Ediacaran-Cambrian transition, shedding new light on the evolution of body segmentation.
Yang, X., Wang, D., Saleh, F., Zhang, Z., Sun, J., Hao, W., Uesugi, K., Komiya, T., Wang, X., Han, J.
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