Jörg Maletz , Xue-Jian Zhu , Yuan-Dong Zhang , Juan Carlos Gutiérrez-Marco
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
‘Feather-like’ fossils, showing the construction from a main stem and bearing lateral unbranched stipes, thus reminding of the construction of a bird’s feather, are common in the Palaeozoic fossil record. A review of these ‘feather-like’ fossils, including new specimens from the late Cambrian (Furongian) Guole Biota of Guangxi, South China, the Ordovician Louredo Formation of Portugal, and the Ordovician Castillejo and Barriga Shale formations of Spain, shows that this particular construction can be found in at least three different groups of organisms: Graptolithina (Hemichordata, Pterobranchia), Hydrozoa (Cnidaria), and macroalgae (Rhodophyta, Phaedophyta, Chlorophyta). The Graptolithina can be differentiated from the other groups by the development of the colonial housing construction. Their tubarium is formed through a glandular secretion of fusellar full or half rings, a highly characteristic feature, forming the interconnected thecal tubes for the zooids. The colonial constructions of the Hydrozoa are based on a dermal development, the periderm, and not formed as a regular glandular secretion from a zooid as in the Graptolithina, thus showing an undifferentiated organic wall. Algae do not have any colonial development in the form of separate modules and show smooth outlines. They also lack the more durable recalcitrant outer coating or housing constructions of Hydrozoa and Graptolithina and are more difficult to preserve in the fossil record.
期刊介绍:
Palaeoworld is a peer-reviewed quarterly journal dedicated to the study of past life and its environment. We encourage submission of original manuscripts on all aspects of palaeontology and stratigraphy, comparisons of regional and global data in time and space, and results generated by interdisciplinary investigations in related fields. Some issues will be devoted entirely to a special theme whereas others will be composed of contributed articles. Palaeoworld is dedicated to serving a broad spectrum of geoscientists and palaeobiologists as well as serving as a resource for students in fields as diverse as palaeobiology, evolutionary biology, taxonomy and phylogeny, geobiology, historical geology, and palaeoenvironment.
Palaeoworld publishes original articles in the following areas:
•Phylogeny and taxonomic studies of all fossil groups
•Biostratigraphy, chemostratigraphy, chronostratigraphy
•Palaeoecology, palaeoenvironment and global changes throughout Earth history
•Tempo and mode of biological evolution
•Biological events in Earth history (e.g., extinctions, radiations)
•Ecosystem evolution
•Geobiology and molecular palaeobiology
•Palaeontological and stratigraphic methods
•Interdisciplinary studies focusing on fossils and strata