'Walking cactus' fossil a major find
CHINESE scientists say a "walking cactus" that inhabited the earth more than 500 million years ago might indicate how the jointed legs of insects, spiders and crustaceans evolved.
The fossil of "Diania cactiformis" - nicknamed the "walking cactus" because of its resemblance to the spiny plant - was collected from the fossil-rich county of Chengjiang, Yunnan Province, in 2006.
Paleontologists from Northwest University in Xi'an, capital of Shaanxi Province, believe the animal belongs to the lobopodia, a poorly understood, now extinct, group of animals that resembled worms with legs.
"It could be seen as a missing link from lobopodians to arthropods," said Dr Liu Jianni, who led the research.
Liu said scientists had long suspected that arthropods evolved from lobopodians, but lacked evidence to prove the hypothesis until the "walking cactus" was found.
Liu's thesis, "An armored Cambrian lobopodian from China with arthropod-like appendages," was published this week as the cover story in the latest issue of Nature.
The fossil, which dates from 500 million years ago, is about 6 centimeters long. It resembles a thin, soft-bodied worm, similar to the lobopodians. But its 10 pairs of jointed legs also resemble those of arthropods.
Liu and her colleagues believe these legs had hardened surfaces, probably similar to the tough surfaces of the articulated limbs of crustaceans or insects.
The finding could indicate that arthropods developed hardened limbs before hardened bodies, the researchers say.
Liu said the development of jointed legs was one of three critical steps in the evolution of arthropods from lobopodians. She and her colleagues hope to find further lobopodia fossils that show the development of both the arthropod head and jointed body.
"With these appendages, arthropods were able to run faster, jump higher and move with more agility. Some appendages even evolved into preying instruments," said professor Shu Degan, head of Northwest University's Early Life Institute. "They helped arthropods become powerful and eventually dominant members of marine, freshwater, land and air ecosystems."
Arthropods comprise more than 80 percent of all known living animal species.
The fossil of "Diania cactiformis" - nicknamed the "walking cactus" because of its resemblance to the spiny plant - was collected from the fossil-rich county of Chengjiang, Yunnan Province, in 2006.
Paleontologists from Northwest University in Xi'an, capital of Shaanxi Province, believe the animal belongs to the lobopodia, a poorly understood, now extinct, group of animals that resembled worms with legs.
"It could be seen as a missing link from lobopodians to arthropods," said Dr Liu Jianni, who led the research.
Liu said scientists had long suspected that arthropods evolved from lobopodians, but lacked evidence to prove the hypothesis until the "walking cactus" was found.
Liu's thesis, "An armored Cambrian lobopodian from China with arthropod-like appendages," was published this week as the cover story in the latest issue of Nature.
The fossil, which dates from 500 million years ago, is about 6 centimeters long. It resembles a thin, soft-bodied worm, similar to the lobopodians. But its 10 pairs of jointed legs also resemble those of arthropods.
Liu and her colleagues believe these legs had hardened surfaces, probably similar to the tough surfaces of the articulated limbs of crustaceans or insects.
The finding could indicate that arthropods developed hardened limbs before hardened bodies, the researchers say.
Liu said the development of jointed legs was one of three critical steps in the evolution of arthropods from lobopodians. She and her colleagues hope to find further lobopodia fossils that show the development of both the arthropod head and jointed body.
"With these appendages, arthropods were able to run faster, jump higher and move with more agility. Some appendages even evolved into preying instruments," said professor Shu Degan, head of Northwest University's Early Life Institute. "They helped arthropods become powerful and eventually dominant members of marine, freshwater, land and air ecosystems."
Arthropods comprise more than 80 percent of all known living animal species.
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