Litcius/Paper detail

Ediacaran origin and Ediacaran-Cambrian diversification of Metazoa

Emily Carlisle, Zongjun Yin, Davide Pisani, Philip C. J. Donoghue

2024Science Advances43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The timescale of animal diversification has been a focus of debate over how evolutionary history should be calibrated to geologic time. Molecular clock analyses have invariably estimated a Cryogenian or Tonian origin of animals while unequivocal animal fossils first occur in the Ediacaran. However, redating of key Ediacaran biotas and the discovery of several Ediacaran crown-Metazoa prompt recalibration of molecular clock analyses. We present revised fossil calibrations and use them in molecular clock analyses estimating the timescale of metazoan evolutionary history. Integrating across uncertainties including phylogenetic relationships, clock model, and calibration strategy, we estimate Metazoa to have originated in the early Ediacaran, Eumetazoa in the middle Ediacaran, and Bilateria in the upper Ediacaran, with many crown-phyla originating across the Ediacaran-Cambrian interval or elsewise fully within the Cambrian. These results are in much closer accord with the fossil record, coinciding with marine oxygenation, but they reject a literal reading of the fossil record.

Topics & Concepts

BilateriaMolecular clockPaleontologyGeologyFossil RecordPhanerozoicBiologyPhylogenetic treeCenozoicStructural basinBiochemistryGeneMarine Biology and Ecology ResearchPaleontology and Stratigraphy of FossilsGeology and Paleoclimatology Research