All the major groups of animals
appear in the fossil record for the first time around 540-500 million years
ago—an event known as the Cambrian Explosion—but new research from the
University of Oxford in collaboration with the University of Lausanne suggests
that for most animals this 'explosion' was in fact a more gradual process.
The Cambrian Explosion produced
the largest and most diverse grouping of animals the Earth has ever seen: the
euarthropods. Euarthropoda contains the insects, crustaceans, spiders,
trilobites, and a huge diversity of other animal forms alive and extinct. They
comprise over 80 percent of all animal species on the planet and are key
components of all of Earth's ecosystems, making them the most important group
since the dawn of animals over
500 million years ago.
A team based at Oxford University
Museum of Natural History and the University of Lausanne carried out the most comprehensive
analysis ever made of early fossil euarthropods from every different possible
type of fossil preservation. In an article published today in
the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences they show that,
taken together, the total fossil record shows a gradual radiation of
euarthropods during the early Cambrian, 540-500 million years ago.
The new analysis presents a
challenge to the two major competing hypotheses about early animal evolution.
The first of these suggests a slow, gradual evolution of euarthropods starting
650-600 million years ago, which had been consistent with earlier molecular
dating estimates of their origin. The other hypothesis claims the nearly
instantaneous appearance of euarthropods 540 million years ago because of highly
elevated rates of evolution.
The new research suggests a
middle-ground between these two hypotheses, with the origin of euarthropods no
earlier than 550 million years ago, corresponding with more recent molecular
dating estimates, and with the subsequent diversification taking place over the
next 40 million years.
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