A Cambrian soft-bodied conical animal illustrates the origins of lophophorate phyla
Zeng, H.; Chen, X.; Liu, Y.; Zhu, M.; Zhao, F.; Yang, A.
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The origin and early evolution of lophotrochozoans remain a difficult but crucial issue in reconstructing metazoan phylogeny. Exceptionally preserved fossils have provided hopeful information for resolving this lophotrochozoan problem. Here we identify that Conicula striata, a soft-bodied conical animal from the early Cambrian Chengjiang Lagerstatte, has mosaic characteristics of different lophophorate phyla. C. striata possesses a phoronid-like vermiform trunk housing a U-shaped gut and a coiled lophophore comprising [≥]12 arms with numerous tentacles, but it also bears brachiopod-like features including an undivided mantle enclosing lophophore and a pedicle-like protrusion on annulated trunk. Phylogenetic analysis retrieves C. striata as a total-group lophophorate and as an intermediate taxon between Phoronida and Brachiopoda. This suggests that the bivalved architecture of brachiopods originated from an undivided mantle in a phoronid-like ancestor, and that the ancestral vermiform trunk became reduced during the origin of Brachiopoda, illuminating the origins of body plans in the lophophorate phyla.
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