Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Satou Tomohiko
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code B000334895
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Divergent evolution of medusozoan symmetric patterns: Evidence from the microanatomy of Cambrian tetramerous cubozoans from South China

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Jian Han
Shin Kubota
Guoxiang Li
Qiang Ou
Xing Wang
Xiaoyong Yao
Degan Shu
Yong Li
Kentaro Uesugi
Masato Hoshino
Osamu Sasaki
Harumasa Kano
Tomohiko Sato
Tsuyoshi Komiya

Summary

Living medusozoans and their Middle Cambrian ancestors are characterized fundamentally by four-fold symmetry. The symmetric pattern of their earlier antecedents during the Ediacaran Cambrian transition, traditionally expected to be tetramerous, needs to be reconsidered in the light of Cambrian pentamerous fossil medusozoans. Here we present a microanatomic analysis of three tiny tetramerous specimens from the Lower Cambrian Kuanchuanpu Formation in southern China; they display diagnostic characteristics of Cubomedusae, including paired but well-separated interradial tentacles deep in the subumbrellar cavity, interradial septa connected by claustra, coronal muscles at the subumbrella, and an annular velarium suspended by twelve frenula. These fossils likely represent three new taxa of a monophyletic stem group of cubomedusans, which is further confirmed by our phylogenetic analysis based on the data matrix with 25 taxa and 107 characteristics. Among these fossil cubozoans and co-occurring pentamerous forms, the specimen ELISN31-31 is mostly close to the crown-group Cubomedusae with regard to its narrow vascular cavity and the endodermic perradial fusion. Diverse symmetrical patterns among different lineages of early Cambrian medusozoan candidates might have been independently evolved in different classes of medusozoans. (C) 2015 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Magazine(name)

GONDWANA RESEARCH

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV

Volume

31

Number Of Pages

 

StartingPage

150

EndingPage

163

Date of Issue

2016-03

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.1016/j.gr.2015.01.003

NAID

 

PMID

 

J-GLOBAL ID

 

arXiv ID

 

ORCID Put Code

 

DBLP ID