Collinsovermis
Collinsovermis Temporal range:
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Life restoration | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
(unranked): | Panarthropoda |
Phylum: | †"Lobopodia" |
Family: | †Luolishaniidae |
Genus: | †Collinsovermis Caron & Aria, 2020 |
Species: | †C. monstruosus
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Binomial name | |
†Collinsovermis monstruosus Caron & Aria, 2020
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Collinsovermis is a genus of extinct
Discovery
Collinsovermis was discovered in 1983 by Desmond H. Collins, curator of invertebrate palaeontology at the Royal Ontario Museum, from an expedition at Mount Stephen at the Yoho National Park, British Columbia, Canada.[3] It was found among the Burgess Shale that belonged to the middle Cambrian period called Wuliuan, which is around 509 to 505 million years ago. In 1985, Collins presented the discovery before the Geological Society of America, and published the next year in a popular magazine Rotunda in an article "Paradise revisited." Avoiding the scientific nomenclature and systematic description, he referred to it as a "spiny animal with hairy legs."[4]
Naming
In 1991, Italian palaeontologists, Laura Delle Cave and Alberto Mario Simonetta published a preliminary description based on Collins's photographs, and gave the nickname "Collins' monster."[5] The complete systematic description and scientific name were given by Jean-Bernard Caron (Royal Ontario Museum and University of Toronto) and Cédric Aria (Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences) in 2020 in the journal Palaeontology. The scientific name Collinsovermis monstruosus literally means Collins' wormy monster.[2] As a unique member of Lobopodia, scientists also created a new family for it as Collinsovermidae.[6]
Description
Collinsovermis is a tiny worm-like soft bodied animal measuring about 3 cm long with multiple pairs of stump legs called
The general body appearance resembles that of Luolishania longicruris (discovered in 1989 in China[7]), which is but smaller and with more posterior lobopods.[8] The head is rounded, small, covered with sclerite (exoskeleton) and has a mouth at its front.[2] Such external body sclerites are also present L. longicruris[8] but absent in other closely related luolishaniid lobopods such as Collinsium (discovered in 2015 from China,[9] popularly known as "Hairy Collins's monster"[10][11]) and Acinocricus (discovered in 1988 from Utah, US[12]). The head also bears a pair of antennae-like projections.[2] Collinsovermis is regarded as characteristically most closely related to Acinocricus, with the major differences being large size (up to 10 cm long), five pairs of anterior legs, absence of sclerites and presence of numerous rows of back spines in the latter.[13][14][2]
Ecology
Like other "luolishaniid" lobopodians, Collinsovermis is thought to have been a sessile suspension feeder, using the posterior pairs of limbs to anchor itself to a substrate, while using its spinose anterior appendages to catch small food particles.[2]
References
- ISBN 978-0-262-04339-7.
- ^ S2CID 225593728.
- ^ S2CID 129298546.
- ^ Collins, Desmond (1986). "Paradise revisited". Rotunda. 19: 37–39.
Presented as: A new Burgess shale type fauna in the Middle Cambrian Stephen Formation on Mt Stephen, British Columbia. Geological Society of America. Abstract Number 550 (1985).
- ISBN 978-0-521-11158-4.
- S2CID 243330614.
- ^ Hou, Xian-Guang; Chen, Jun-Yuan (1989). "Luolishania gen. nov. : Un animal marin intermédiaire entre arthropode et annélidé du Cambrien inférieur de Chengjiang dans le Yunnan" [Luolishania gen. nov.: A marine animal intermediate between arthropod and annelid from the Lower Cambrian of Chengjiang in Yunnan]. Gǔshēngwùxué Bào (Acta Palaeontologica Sinica) (in French). 28 (2): 207–213.
- ^ PMID 19293001.
- PMID 26124122.
- ^ Oldfield, Philip (2015-06-29). "Hairy monster: ancient 'super-armoured' worm discovered in China". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2015-08-03. Retrieved 2022-01-02.
- ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2022-01-02.
- ISSN 0075-5052.
- S2CID 134674792.
- PMID 28137244.