Tracing the evolution of the holothurian body plan through stem-group fossils

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Abstract

The fossil echinoderm Palaeocucumaria, from the early Devonian Hunsrück Slate of southwestern Germany, has been studied using both traditional techniques and X-ray microtomography, and its anatomy clarified. Phylogenetic analysis shows that it is a stem-group holothurian with a combination of characters that help understand how the modern (crown-group) holothurian body plan developed. Echinoids and holothurians have evolved along different paths, by differential growth of the larval- and rudment-derived body regions. Palaeocucumaria shows that late stem-group holothurians had a water vascular organization with a single external madreporite and calcified stone canal leading to the aboral end of the peripharyngeal coelom, and five primary radial water vessels that gave rise to tentacle-like tube-feet. This fossil data, in combination with a molecular phylogeny based on 18s-like rRNA gene sequence data, is used to order evolutionary steps in the making of the crown-group holothurian body plan.© 2013 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2013, 109, 670-681. © 2013 The Linnean Society of London.

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Smith, A. B., & Reich, M. (2013). Tracing the evolution of the holothurian body plan through stem-group fossils. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 109(3), 670–681. https://doi.org/10.1111/bij.12073

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