• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

518-Million-Year-Old Ancient Armored Worm Is Ancestor Of Three Major Animal Groups

September 27, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

An ancient worm preserved in the fossil record for 518 million years old has been found to be a pivotal point in the evolutionary tree, representing the ancestor of three major groups of animals. Wufengella, as the fella’ is known, was a bristly character measuring just half an inch in length, and hails from an extinct group of animals known as tommotiids.

These Cambrian shelly fossils have been retrieved from across the globe but still little is known about them. However, Wufengella is proving to be an interesting addition to the order.

Advertisement

With asymmetrical armor encasing a fleshy body lined with spiny projections that sat between flattened lobes on either side of the body, it looked a little like a tiny toilet brush. Its unusual getup hints toward a segmented body plan in the worm’s evolutionary past, similar to that of an earthworm.

wefengella

The fossil Wufengella and a drawing outlining the major components of the organism. Image credit: Jakob Vinther and Luke Parry

While its funky look is impressive, it’s also a little deceiving.

“It looks like the unlikely offspring between a bristle worm and a chiton mollusc,” said Dr Jakob Vinther from the University of Bristol’s School of Earth Sciences, in a statement. “Interestingly, it belongs to neither of those groups.”

Advertisement

Vinther is part of a team working on the Wufengella discovery, who together have concluded that the armored, bristly worm was a generous one as far as inheritance is concerned, passing on some of its traits to a surprisingly wide range of animals. There are over 30 leading body plans in the animal kingdom (known to scientists as phyla), and with the speedy rate at which evolution occurred during the biodiversity boom that was the Cambrian Explosion, only a few creatures saw their traits passed down across several phyla.

One of those exceptions was Wufengella.

wefengella

A schematic outline of how tommotiids tell us about the evolution of body plans across the tree of Life. Image credit: Luke Parry

There’s a curious organ found within brachiopods (valved animals like Lingula anatine) that enables them to filter water, called a lophophore. It’s essentially a pair of tentacles folded into a horseshoe shape, and it’s shared by two other big names in the phylum roster: phoronids (known as horseshoe worms) and bryozoans (called moss animals).

Advertisement

The trio form the Lophophorata as a group of closely related organisms – and working backward from their body plan to that of our funky Wufengella, it seems the bristly ancient worm is their shared ancestor. The discovery is a bit like putting the final puzzle piece into a jigsaw, since researchers knew the Lophophorata relative was out there but had been unable to find it.

“When it first became clear to me what this fossil was that I was looking at under the microscope, I couldn’t believe my eyes,” said co-author Dr Luke Parry from the University of Oxford. “This is a fossil that we have often speculated about and hoped we would one day lay eyes on.”

Co-author Greg Edgecombe from the Natural History Museum explained why Wufengella is a poster child for the importance of the fossil record when piecing together evolutionary trees.

Advertisement

“We get an incomplete picture by only looking at living animals, with the relatively few anatomical characters that are shared between different phyla,” he said. “With fossils like Wufengella, we can trace each lineage back to its roots, realising how they once looked altogether different and had very different modes of life, sometimes unique and sometimes shared with more distant relatives.”

This study was published in Current Biology.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Italy’s Draghi says still hopes to hold a G20 summit on Afghanistan
  2. Exclusive: Lebanon draft policy statement says government committed to IMF talks
  3. Soft-spoken Kishida to become Japan’s next PM after party vote
  4. Black Hole Collisions Could Be Key To Determining The Universe’s Expansion

Source Link: 518-Million-Year-Old Ancient Armored Worm Is Ancestor Of Three Major Animal Groups

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • New Brain Implant Can Decode Your Internal Monologue, Raising Fears Of Mind Reading
  • “Immediate, Sustained, And Devastating” Pain: The Most Venomous Mammal Packs An Extremely Nasty Sting
  • Domestic Cats Keeping Making Hybrids. That’s A Problem, And Yes – That Includes Some Pets
  • These Strange Little Lizards Have Toxic Green Blood, And No One Knows Exactly Why
  • How Does 2-In-1 Shampoo And Conditioner Work?
  • There Are 2-Billion-Year-Old “Millennium Rocks” In A Suburb, Hundreds Of Miles From Their Primeval Home
  • “That’s A Hellfire Missile Smacking Into That UFO”: Strange Video Emerges From US UAP Hearing
  • In 40,000 Years, Voyager 1 Will Have A Close Encounter With Gliese 445
  • Abnormally Long Gamma Ray Burst Unlike Anything We’ve Seen Before Baffles Astronomers
  • Critically Endangered Shark Meat Is Being Sold In US Stores For As Little As $2.99
  • Infectious Mouth Bacteria Lurking In Artery Plaques Could Be Behind Some Heart Attacks
  • What Would You Reach If You Kept Digging Under Antarctica?
  • First Visible Time Crystals Ever Made Have Astonishing Complexity And Practical Potential
  • “Something Undeniably Special”: The Chi Cygnids, A New Five-Yearly Meteor Shower, Peak This Month
  • A 200-Meter-Tall Event We Didn’t See Sent Signals Through The Earth For Nine Whole Days
  • Why Are So Many Volcanoes Underwater?
  • In 1977, A Hybrid Was Born In A Zoo. What It Taught Us Could Save One Of The Planet’s Most Endangered Species
  • How To Park A Dangerous Asteroid So It Doesn’t Bite You Later
  • New Study Finds Evidence For What Every Parent Knows About Bluey
  • New Breakthrough Takes Plastic Garbage And Turns It Into Tool For Carbon Capture
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version