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Testing the protozoan hypothesis for Ediacaran fossils: a developmental analysis of Palaeopascichnus
Authors:JONATHAN B. ANTCLIFFE  ANDREW J. GOODAY  MARTIN D. BRASIER
Affiliation:1. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Wills Memorial Building, Queen’s Road, Bristol BS81RJ, UK;2. e‐mail: jonathanantcliffe@hotmail.com;3. National Oceanography Centre, Southampton, University of Southampton Waterfront Campus, European Way, Southampton SO14 3ZH, UK;4. e‐mail: ang@noc.soton.ac.uk;5. Department of Earth Sciences, Oxford University, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3AN, UK;6. e‐mail: martin.brasier@earth.ox.ac.uk
Abstract:Abstract: The hypothesis that the Ediacara biota were giant protozoans is tested by considering the external morphology, internal organization, suggested fossil representatives and molecular phylogeny of the xenophyophores. From this analysis, we find no case to support a direct relationship. Rather, the xenophyophores are here regarded as a group of recently evolved Foraminifera and are hence unlikely to have a record from the Ediacaran Period. Further from the growth dynamics of Foraminifera, they are also unlikely to be related to the Palaeopascichnus organism. We also find significant distinctions in the growth dynamics of Palaeopascichnus and organisms usually referred to the Ediacara biota, such as Charnia and Dickinsonia. Developmental analysis of the Palaeopascichnus– central to the xenophyophore hypothesis – reveals unusual, protozoan features, including evidence for chaotic repair structures, for mergence of coeval forms, as well as complex bifurcations. These observations suggest that Palaeopascichnus is a body fossil of an unidentified protozoan but is unrepresentative of Ediacaran body construction, in general.
Keywords:Palaeopascichnus  Ediacara biota  Protozoa  xenophyophores  development  evolution
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