Litcius/Paper detail

Discovery of the oldest bilaterian from the Ediacaran of South Australia

Scott D. Evans, Ian V. Hughes, James G. Gehlîng, Mary L. Droser

2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences95 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Significance The transition from simple, microscopic forms to the abundance of complex animal life that exists today is recorded within soft-bodied fossils of the Ediacara Biota (571 to 539 Ma). Perhaps most critically is the first appearance of bilaterians—animals with two openings and a through-gut—during this interval. Current understanding of the fossil record limits definitive evidence for Ediacaran bilaterians to trace fossils and enigmatic body fossils. Here, we describe the fossil Ikaria wariootia, one of the oldest bilaterians identified from South Australia. This organism is consistent with predictions based on modern animal phylogenetics that the last ancestor of all bilaterians was simple and small and represents a rare link between the Ediacaran and the subsequent record of animal life.

Topics & Concepts

Trace fossilPaleontologyBiotaPhanerozoicTaphonomyMost recent common ancestorAncestorPaleobiologyLineage (genetic)BiologyGeologyEvolutionary biologyGeographyEcologyPhylogeneticsStructural basinArchaeologyCenozoicGeneBiochemistryPaleontology and Stratigraphy of FossilsGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchGeochemistry and Elemental Analysis